Download - SOUTH AUSTRALIAN MUSEUM BOARD
SOUTH AUSTRALIA
__________________
ANNUAL REPORT
OF THE
SOUTH AUSTRALIAN
MUSEUM BOARD
2009-2010
August 2010
South Australian Museum
North Terrace
Adelaide, South Australia 5000
ABN 39 808 959 302
www.samuseum.sa.gov.au
Director
Telephone +61 (08) 8207 7395
For copies of this document please
contact:
Website: www.samuseum.gov.au
Telephone: +61 (08) 8207 7431
Facsimile: +61 (08) 8207 7643
ISSN 0375-1619
2
ANNUAL REPORT
of the
SOUTH AUSTRALIAN MUSEUM BOARD
2009-10
CONTENTS Page No.
1. ROLE, LEGISLATION, STRUCTURE 4/5.
2. ACHIEVEMENTS AND INITIATIVES 6.
Introduction
Alignment with SA Strategic Plan Objectives
Highlights
-Visitation
-Exhibitions
-Touring Exhibitions
-Staff Achievements and Awards
Community Engagement
Official Visits
Education Services
Aboriginal Reconciliation
Science Research
The Collections
SA Museum Foundation
Support Organisations
-Friends of the South Australian Museum
-The Waterhouse Club
Volunteer Support
Work Experience
Staff Achievements and Awards
Commercial Activities
- Venue Hire
- Sponsorship & Business Development
Media
Greening of Government
3.
PUBLICATIONS – SOUTH AUSTRALIAN MUSEUM STAFF 2009-10 33.
4. STAFF LIST
63.
3
5. HUMAN RESOURCES 69.
6.
OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH, SAFETY AND INJURY MANAGEMENT (OHS&IM) 73.
7.
FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT, 1991 PART 11 SECTION 9(2)
80.
8.
INDEPENDENT AUDIT REPORT
9.
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
10.
NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
4
ANNUAL REPORT OF THE
SOUTH AUSTRALIAN MUSEUM BOARD 2009-10
1. ROLE, LEGISLATION, STRUCTURE
ROLE AND LEGISLATION
The role of management of the South Australian Museum is prescribed under the
South Australian Museum Act, 1976-1985.
To increase knowledge and understanding of our natural and cultural heritage: to
serve the community by acquiring, preserving, interpreting and presenting to the
public, material evidence concerning people and nature; and to provide opportunities
for study, education and enjoyment.
The South Australian Museum is a Division of Arts South Australia within the
Department of the Premier and Cabinet. The South Australian Museum Board
comprises eight people appointed by the Minister. The Board functions as a body
corporate.
Members of the Board during 2009-10 were:
Mr John Ellice-Flint – Chair
Mr Paul Ah Chee
Ms Natasha Stott Despoja – commenced September 2009
Ms Noelene Buddle
Dr Sue Carthew
Mr Robert Edwards AO
Ms Elizabeth Perry
Mr Antony Simpson
5
STRUCTURE
The organisational structure of the South Australian Museum is outlined as follows:
DIRECTOR
ARTS
SOUTH
AUSTRALIA
DEPT OF
PREMIER &
CABINET
SCIENCES PUBLIC
PROGRAMS
DIRECTORATE
ANTHROPOLOGY
BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES &
EVOLUTIONARY
BIOLOGY
COLLECTIONS
EARTH SCIENCES
HISTORY OF
SCIENCE
INFORMATION
SERVICES
EXHIBITION
DEVELOPMENT &
DESIGN
TOURING
EXHIBITIONS
COMMUNITY
ENGAGEMENT
& INDIGENOUS
INFORMATION
MARKETING
MULTI-MEDIA
PROGRAMS &
EVENTS
ADMINISTRATION
COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENT
AND SPONSORSHIP
TRANSPORT
OCCUPATIONAL
HEALTH SAFETY AND WELFARE
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY
BOARD
6
2. ACHIEVEMENTS AND INITIATIVES
INTRODUCTION
As ever, the year has been one of sustained activity and challenge.
The development and adoption of a new strategic plan developed by the Director, Prof
Suzanne Miller, in consultation with all major museum stakeholders and embracing
all operational activities of the museum has provided a forward template of priorities
and focus. In essence, the strategic plan addresses:
Continuing endeavours to ensure the museum engages with the South Australian
community at the broadest level,
Accessibility to the museum‟s collections incorporating the latest technologies
including digitisation and electronic access,
Scientific research excellence is maintained and further developed,
Partnership collaboration occurs with the State‟s Universities and,
The museum consistently ensures the optimum utilisation of all available
resources.
The adoption of the strategic plan has been reflected in the museum‟s ongoing diverse
public program of exhibitions, events, and activities combined with continuing
science research and collections excellence that is reflected in the ongoing success of
research grant funding, publications and collection acquisition through ongoing
donations.
ALIGNMENT WITH THE SOUTH AUSTRALIAN STRATEGIC PLAN
OBJECTIVES
The museum continues to sustain and develop its commitment to key objectives of the
South Australian Strategic Plan. In particular:
Growing prosperity - through scientific research with economic implications and
maintaining appropriate links to and promotion of the State‟s tourism industry.
Improved well-being - as a key resource in the cultural and scientific life of the
State.
Attaining sustainability - through the museum‟s endeavours in energy and water
conservation and the promotion of sustainability initiatives through its public
programs. The new Biodiversity Gallery further incorporates significant
messages associated with sustainability.
Fostering creativity and innovation - in widening its audience participation
through its active support for initiatives such as the Waterhouse Natural History
Art Prize and the ANZANG Nature photography competition and exhibition.
Building communities - through its outreach and regional Roadshow programs.
Expanding opportunity - with its delivery of innovative curriculum related
education programs, promotion of science career opportunities and scientific
research partnerships with South Australian Universities.
7
HIGHLIGHTS
Visitation
Again the museum has achieved record levels of visitation for the reporting period.
Overall visitation to the museum, its regional events and touring exhibitions for the
2009-10 financial year was 891 357, an improvement of 11.9% on the 2008-09
period. The North Terrace sites have attracted the greatest number of visitation;
808 124 visitors have been recorded for this reporting period, an improvement of 3%
on 2008/09. As indicated below this level of visitation is the highest ever recorded by
the museum.
A portion of the strong North Terrace visitation number was a direct contribution by
school groups from throughout the state. In total 32 660 students visited either the
museum or Science Centre at North Terrace, a further 4 244 students experienced the
museum as part of the in-classroom Discovery Case program, Travelling Education
Service or participation in Regional Roadshows.
Exhibitions travelling from the museum have also been well received by visitors to
other institutions. For the reporting period, a total of 78 989 people visited the
museum‟s outward touring exhibitions. Exhibitions toured during the period include;
ANZANG Nature Photography (total 28 973 visitors at Western Australian Museum
Albany, Geraldton and Fremantle), The Waterhouse Natural History Art Prize 2009
(total 9 168 visitors at National Archives, Canberra) and Australia‟s Muslim
Cameleers: Pioneers of the Inland, 1860s – 1930s (total 40 848 visitors at Museum
Victoria – Immigration Museum, Melbourne).
743994
668045
728577
683123
759689 756502
736931
787730
808124
600000
625000
650000
675000
700000
725000
750000
775000
800000
825000
01/02 02/03 03/04 04/05 05/06 06/07 07/08 08/09 09/10
8
BIODIVERSITY GALLERY
A highlight of the year was the completion of the South Australian Biodiversity
Gallery. The gallery showcases the incredible diversity of South Australia‟s fauna
from arid regions to deep marine. The gallery has been very well received by visitors.
STAFF ACHIEVEMENTS AND AWARDS
The Board congratulates Mr Steve Riley PSM, former Head of Development and
General Manager SA Museum, on being a recipient for the Public Service Medal on
14 June 2010. Mr Riley was awarded the PSM for outstanding public service in the
arts, specifically with regards to the South Australian Museum.
The Board also congratulates Mrs Joy Mallett, President of the Friends of the South
Australian Museum, on being awarded the Order of Australia Medal for service to the
arts through the Friends of the South Australian Museum
During the reporting period, Mr Mark Adams, Researcher, Evolutionary Biology
Unit, SA Museum, was appointed as an Affiliate Senior Lecturer at the University of
Adelaide and Dr Steve Cooper received the 2009 Titleholder Prize from the School of
Earth and Environmental Sciences, the University of Adelaide.
Dr Jim Gehling, Senior Researcher, Palaeontology, was awarded the 2009 Premier of
Victoria Literary Award for Science Writing for „The Rise of Animals: Evolution and
Diversification of the Kingdom Animalia‟. The Board congratulates Dr Gehling on
this significant achievement.
9
SPECIAL EXHIBITIONS
Waterhouse Natural History Art Prize
18 July until 6 September 2009
Visitation: 10 544
The seventh annual Waterhouse Natural History Art Prize saw Sydney artist Matilda
Michell awarded the $50 000 overall prize for her six-panel painting Fish. The
exhibition of 101 artworks was selected from 873 entries, the largest number ever
submitted.
ANZANG Nature Photography
2 October until 22 November 2009
Visitation: 4 644
A photographic competition focusing on the bioregion of Australia, New Zealand,
Antarctica and New Guinea, ANZANG Nature Photography came under the
management of the South Australian Museum from 2009. This exhibition featured the
89 best photographs from the 1 500 submitted to the annual competition. Nick Moir‟s
photograph Temora bushfire won the overall prize for its depiction of the destructive
essence of Australian bush fires.
Wildlife of Gondwana
19 December 2009 until 14 February 2010
Visitation: 10 238
A display of the fossil record from the Great Southern Super continent, Gondwana;
Wildlife of Gondwana featured material from 3.8 billion years ago to the present. The
information-rich exhibition from Monash Science Centre featured a significant
number of actual and cast specimens from Australian and South American sources.
Tjukurpa Pulkatjara
4 March until 14 March 2010
Visitation: 6 791
An exhibition of contemporary art from the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara
Lands and the Ngaanyatjarra Lands, Tjukurpa Pulkatjara epitomised the highest
standard of Australian Indigenous art while highlighting the importance of
provenance and ethical acquisition of works. Organised by Ananguku Arts and
Culture Aboriginal Corporation in conjunction with the museum.
Palaeontology Week
18 March until March 2010
Visitation: 9 886
The Special Exhibition Gallery once again became the hub for activities and displays
associated with the annual Palaeontology Week. Greater detail is provided in the
„Community Engagement‟ report of this document.
10
Wildlife Photographer of the Year
5 May – 20 June 2010
Visitation: 5 191
An exhibition developed from the internationally renowned Wildlife Photographer of
the Year competition, owned by the Natural History Museum in London and BBC
Wildlife Magazine. From more than 43 000 entries submitted, the exhibition featured
the best 95 photographs.
AUSTRALIAN ABORIGINAL CULTURES GALLERY –
TEMPORARY EXHIBITION GALLERY
Nganampa Mantaku Mapany : A Map of Our Land
3 April - 23 May 2010
Visitation: 12 566
An exhibition from the Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) Lands,
Nganampa Mantaku Mapanya: a map of our land is the result of a unique relationship
between PIRSA (Primary Industries and Resources SA) and the Tjungu Palya arts
collective.
Rod Moss paintings The Hard Light of Day
26 May - 27 June
Visitation: 6 020
Rod Moss has been living and painting in Alice Springs for over two decades, forging
close ties with the Aboriginal community there. This exhibition featured six paintings
from this body of work and coincided with the release of Rod‟s memoirs, The Hard
Light of Day.
MEGAFAUNA GALLERY
Megafauna Gallery - Christine Gates, The Desert and the Inland Sea
28 May - 25 July 2010
Visitation not available
Inspired by explorer Charles Sturt, who dragged a whaleboat into the deserts of
central Australia, and by material from the South Australian Museum collections,
artist Christine Gates developed a collection of prints that were displayed alongside
collection material used in their creation.
VARIOUS LOCATIONS INSIDE SOUTH AUSTRALIAN MUSEUM
Inside SAM’s place
4 June – 1 August 2010
Visitation not available
11
The Inside SAM’s Place program of artists residencies will feature three projects in
2010-11. The first project (4 June to 29 August 2010) has been The Laurosto
Collection, by artists Rosie Hannam, Tom Moore and Lauren Simeoni, comprised
elements of visual art and design inspired by collection items at the SA Museum and
integrated into public displays. Made up of fictitious animals, artefacts, minerals and
ceremonial objects belonging to the equally fictitious 19th century explorer and
scientist Sam Laurosto, The Laurosto Collection was the fourth instalment of Inside
SAM‟s Place, a creative collaboration between the SA Museum and Craftsouth, the
South Australian peak industry body for craftspeople, designers and visual artists.
Spotlight displays
A program of focus exhibitions that present donations, research and unusual
collection items in front foyer locations. In 2009-10 the series featured:
Zygomaturus skull sub-fossil and Flint Pouches, a donation of Tibetan fire lighting
kits.
Focus Display Wokali, the Kaurna shield has been on display in the Australian Aboriginal Cultures Gallery
during 2010 with the exception of a loan period during May when it was displayed at the
Town Hall as part of the Reconciliation Week celebrations.
TOURING EXHIBITIONS
ANZANG Nature Photography
The full exhibition of ANZANG Nature Photography travelled to Western Australia
after the exhibition closed at the South Australian Museum,
Western Australian Museum – Albany
8 December 2009 to 14 February 2010
Visitation: 15 341
Western Australian Museum - Geraldton
20 February 2010 to 26 April 2010
Visitation: 6 042
Western Australian Museum - Maritime (Fremantle)
29 April 2010 to 7 July 2010
Visitation (up to 30 June 2010): 7 590
Waterhouse Natural History Art Prize
An exhibition of 30 prize-winning and highly commended artworks from the 2009
Waterhouse Natural History Art Prize.
National Archives of Australia, Canberra
24 September – 15 November 2009
Visitation: 9 168
12
Australia’s Muslim Cameleers: Pioneers of the Inland, 1860s – 1930s
Australia’s Muslim Cameleers: Pioneers of the Inland, 1860s – 1930s, developed by
the South Australian Museum in 2007, reveals the remarkable contribution made by
Australia‟s first Muslim community made to the exploration and settlement of
Australia‟s arid interior. Its tour of Australian venues continued into its third year.
Museum Victoria - Immigration Museum, Melbourne
Friday 26 February - Sunday 19 September 2010
Visitation (up to 30 June 2010): 40 848
13
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
The Community Engagement Team continue to develop and implement integrated
programs which ensure the museum‟s collections and research are accessible to the
diverse groups of visitors for study, education and enjoyment.
For the reporting period, the department has focused on refining existing programs
and events while identifying areas for change, improvement and new development.
Priorities for forward progression have been identified. The team has worked
collaboratively with internal and external stakeholders, working towards achieving
long-term, strategic business plans through the provision of targeted programs.
The department has continued to strengthen its relationships across the organisation,
including closer links with the Science Centre staff. The museum continue to develop
relationships with many organisations outside the SA Museum including colleagues
along the North Terrace precinct (State Library of South Australia, ArtLab Australia,
the Art Gallery of South Australia and Migration Museum) and other organisations
such as the RiAus and UniSA, resulting in collaborations on a wide variety of
programs including Science Week, Palaeontology Week and Roadshows.
Highlights:
Bring Us Your Bugs 2
Part 2 of Bring Us Your Bugs was held on the 7 October 2009. This highly successful
event was a collaboration between the SA Museum, Barbara Hardy Centre Uni SA,
891 ABC Adelaide, Burt‟s Bees and FauNature. Researchers from The University of
South Australia and the SA Museum collected live invertebrates from the „wilds‟ of
Adelaide. The event was held on the front lawns of the museum and was conducted
in conjunction with a live, outside broadcast by ABC 891 Radio, Adelaide attracting
thousands of visitors. Over 1 000 bugs (including one moth unrecorded for over 70
years) were collected and the museum recorded an attendance of 4 651 visitors
through its doors for the day.
Opening of the Biodiversity Gallery
A large amount of energy was channelled into the official opening of the Biodiversity
Gallery in February, 2010. To complement the official launch, the Community
Engagement team developed a comprehensive 3 day program for visitors. Events
included specialist tours of the gallery, floor talks, torchlight tours, a twilight event
establishing of a Village Green on the front lawn (involving a range of SA Museum
scientists and special guests), a highly popular family day and a children‟s trail
through the gallery.
14
Tell me a Story
Tell me a Story is a continuation from the program developed in the last reporting
period, designed for young children and their families to discover some of the
wonderful stories from the museum collections. Tell me a Story has continued to be a
success and has attracted a large interest from families with children aged 3-5 years.
Due to its popularity the program has been expanded in 2010, with scheduling going
from one session per month to four sessions per month, offered over 2 days. The
Community Engagement team acknowledge the commitment shown to the program
by Toby Finch and Shay Thomas-Rampal who deliver these popular events. For the
2009-10 period, a total of 216 children participated in the programme..
Sprigg Lecture Series
Established in August 2008, the Sprigg Lecture Series continues to commemorate the
achievements of Dr Reginald Sprigg by delivering scientists to the public via lectures
addressing current issues. Guest speakers and attendees enjoyed „fully booked‟
sessions of events held in 2009-10, with an average of 210 attendees per lecture.
18 August 2009
Presented by Professor Ian Plimer, Mawson Laboratories University of Adelaide
1 December 2009
Presented by Professor Pat Vickers-Rich, Monash Science Centre Melbourne
23 March 2010
Presented by Professor Michael Archer, Dean Faculty of Science University of NSW
Science Week
The Science Week program continues to attract schools audiences through the Face-
to-Face student workshop program, developed in collaboration with the Museum‟s
Education team. In 2009 the Science + Art =? Family day was introduced to connect
Science Week with the Waterhouse Natural History Art Prize exhibition. This free
family day included workshops, art trails and talks. It was extremely popular with
visitors and will be implemented again in August 2010.
As part of the Science Week program, the SA Museum opened its „behind the scenes‟
doors to the public, hosting tours through collection storages areas at Netley and
science labs in Bolivar. Numerous performances and events were held for school
groups and families over the week, engaging hundreds of people through a varied
schedule of events, tours and performances.
Palaeontology Week
This nine day event continued to attract a high number of repeat and new visitors. A
collaborate approach to program development resulted in a program including SA
Museum, national and international palaeontologists. As in 2009, the temporary
exhibition space provided an excellent base for a broad range of a range of talks, tours
and displays for visitors.
15
Workshops for school students with the museum education team were conducted
during the week, a twilight event engaging older students was introduced, and events
in the fossil regional areas (Burra, Naracoorte, Kangaroo Island and Arkaroola) were
also conducted. As with Science Week, the museum had impressive participation in
all of the events.
Out of the Glass Case Roadshows
The „Out of the Glass Case’ Roadshows continue to be a highly popular and
successful innovation reaching audiences across the state. In 2010 the SA Museum
embarked on a comprehensive and exciting Roadshow to Umuwa in the APY Lands.
This Roadshow was many years in the making and its success was due to an
incredible, comprehensive program developed by Sue Mikkelsen.
For the 2009-10 period the Out of the Glass Case Roadshows visited the following
regional areas:
September 2009 – Mid North Roadshow
Flinders Ranges school days (Quorn, Hawker and Leigh Creek) reaching:
A total of 360 students ranging from Reception to Year 4, Years 8 to 10, plus
120 members of the local community.
November 2009 – South East Roadshow
The South East Roadshows hosted schools day in Mount Gambier and Millicent
reaching an approximate 450 students. An addition, a total 120 people attended
afternoon events for public engagement across both locations. Events were also held
in Robe with the museum participating in the Robe Village Festival/Fair, attracting an
estimated 500 people.
March 2010 – Palaeontology Week Roadshow
Held in conjunction with the SA Museum Palaeontology Week, satellite events were
conducted in Burra, Naracoorte, Kangaroo Island and Coober Pedy and drew an
estimated 240 students for school workshops and 500 general public to evening talks.
May 2010 – APY Lands
The week long Roadshow „hub‟ in Umuwa attracted all nine school communities,
reaching approximately 640 students who were accompanied by visiting teachers,
parents and community elders/leaders.
Friday‟s Community Day saw participation by Land Management Indigenous rangers
and community Elders, Ernabella School Choir, Fregon and Ernabella Art Groups for
workshops together with access by special needs groups such as aged care and
disabled with significant visitation from local residents and community leaders.
16
School Holiday Program
One of the highlights for families is the extremely successful School Holiday
Program, managed by Kristy Tucker. The Community Engagement team have
maintained a commitment to developing and improving this program by:
Increasing the involvement of employed School Holiday Program staff in the
collaborative planning and review of the program,
Implementing a training program for staff to enhance group cohesion and develop
their knowledge of the collections,
Successfully applying for grant funding to assist in the delivery of a
comprehensive NAIDOC celebration during the July school holiday program,
Strengthening the connections between the program and the museum‟s
collections and stories through careful selection of activities, interpretation,
handouts, trails and publicity.
Visitation to the School Holiday Program for 2009-10
Monthly Comparison of School Holiday Program
Participants
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
January N/A 1250 1007 4801 1227
April 833 1788 1951 1644 2339
July 1519 1861 2181 3024
October 871 1718 2763 1978
Total 3223 6617 7902 11447
Visitation to SA Museum Holiday Programs
0
2000
4000
6000
8000
10000
12000
14000
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
January
April
July
October
Total
17
Other Events and Programs
Other events and programs over the last 12 months have included Inside SAM's Place
in partnership with Craftsouth, Public Sector Week, History Week, Volunteers Week
as well as hosting a number of student teachers and work experience students.
Reopening of the Information Centre
In May 2010, the museum opened a temporary Information Centre to replace the
Discovery Centre previously closed due to the development of the Biodiversity
Gallery. The museum is in the process of planning a new Information Centre for its
visitors.
18
OFFICIAL VISITS AND TOURS
24 & 25 September 2009
His Excellency Mr Abelardo Curbelo Pardon
Ambassador of the Republic of Cuba
20 January 2010
Mr SHIM Byung-sub, Director of International cooperation,
CHUNGCHEONGNAM-DO PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT
7 May 2010
His Excellency Mr David Martin Daly,
Ambassador and Head of Delegation of the commission of the European
Communities.
3 June 2010
His Excellency Mr Vincencije Biuk, Ambassador of The Republic of Croatia
16 September 2009
Tom MacDonald, Consul General of Canada
25 November 2009
H.E. MR. Gian Ludovico DE Martino di Montegiordano,
Itlaian Ambassador to Australia
19
EDUCATION SERVICES
The SA Museum continues collaborate work with the Department of Education and
Children‟s Services enabling education opportunities for thousands of South
Australian school children. For the reporting period the museum recorded 32 660
students visiting the North Terrace sites, with a total of 36 904 students participating
in museum orientated educational activities. Activities include North Terrace visits,
Travelling Education Service (TES), in-classroom Discovery Cases and Regional
Roadshows. The most popular galleries and programs utilised by school groups for
the period are indicated in the table below.
Most Popular Galleries Visited
Note: Total number of gallery visits is higher than the overall student numbers stated
as many student groups tour multiple galleries.
* Discovery Trail is a self guided tour of the museum with the aid of teacher notes
prepared by museum based Education Officers.
** Biodiversity Gallery opened February 2010.
10,183
7,981
6,131
3,298
2,599
2,3611,267 Discovery Trail* - 10,183
Australian Aboriginal Cultures
Gallery - 7,981
Biodiversity Gallery** - 6,131
Egypt Gallery - 3,298
Fossils Gallery - 2,599
Sir Douglas Mawson Gallery - 2,361
Pacific Cultures Gallery - 1,267
20
Visitation to North Terrace Sites by Sector
The Department of Education and Children’s Services Education Officers
Two education officers on secondment from DECS continued to provide ongoing
support to teachers and school groups visiting the Museum. They were supported by
Christina Pietrantonio from the museum, and two Indigenous Culture and language
specialists employed as hourly paid instructors.
Simon Langsford, Education Officer (EO DECS), formally worked on the Museum
Biodiversity Gallery project on secondment from DECS. Simon and Chris Nobbs (EO
DECS) developed a suite of new print resources to support teaching and learning in
the new gallery including an MP3 audio tour and hands-on activities. A new
interactive screen and computer has been purchased to deliver innovative student
centred learning programs in the Biodiversity Gallery and other galleries. A series of
professional development programs were also organised to introduce teachers to the
new education programs for the Biodiversity Gallery. The programs developed for the
Biodiversity Gallery are proving extremely successful. Within the first 4 months of
opening, the Biodiversity Gallery hosted 6 131 students, equating to an average of 76
students per school day.
The education team worked closely in collaboration with public programs and science
staff to ensure that innovative teaching and learning programs were accessible to
students in both the metropolitan and country schools across South Australia.
61%
36%
3%
Public Schools - 61%
Catholic or Independent
Schools - 36%
Other Educational
Institutions - 3%
21
The Travelling Education Service
Education officers continued to work in collaboration with exhibitions staff and
museum scientists on the development of a new Travelling Education Service (TES).
The exhibition modules focus on collections-based scientific research at the museum
with reference to the study of evolution, arachnids, deep-sea animals, marine reptiles
and Ediacaran fossils. The production of the new TES, titled Collect, Research
Discover, was in abeyance until the completion of the Biodiversity Gallery and is now
scheduled for completion on 23 August 2010 after which it will tour of the mid-north
of South Australia.
Special Programs
A number of highly successful special programs were organised for schools in
collaboration with the managers of the museum‟s Community Engagement including
Palaeontology Week, National Science Week and The Waterhouse Natural History
Art Prize exhibition. The education service also contributed to the delivery of
Regional Roadshows to the APY Lands and Kangaroo Island with a combined total of
800 students accessing programs through these events.
Therese Minitong-Kemelfield from Bougainville delivered hands-on programs for
students in the Pacific Cultures Gallery using the new Discovery Drawers and
education display case.
Elsie Amamoo, a Gubbi Gubbi and Nurrunga woman facilitated the Indigenous Youth
Program (IYP). The IYP has grown and is now attracting more Aboriginal students
who achieve learning outcomes at the museum. These learning outcomes count
towards their South Australian Certificate of Education (SACE). Students assist in
delivering teaching and learning programs to students visiting the Australian
Aboriginal Cultures Gallery, visit the museum‟s Archive, the museum‟s store at
Netley, receive an introduction to the Ara Irititja program as well participate in a tour
of the museum‟s Ethnographic collections administered by Tara Dodd.
The new education Discovery Cases are in constant demand and the bookings process
is efficiently and effectively coordinated by Christina Pietrantonio. For the reporting
period the Discovery Cases were loaned to schools 68 times. This has been made
possible with sponsorship from Santos.
Education Volunteers
In a new initiative, the education team have established a group of Education
Volunteers to assist in meeting the growing demand for face-to face teaching in the
museum galleries.
22
ABORIGINAL RECONCILIATION
The Museum continues its active participation in the Return of Indigenous Cultural
Property program funded by the Federal Government. Consultations continue with
Aboriginal communities and senior custodians within both South Australia and
interstate to inform the collections and, as appropriate, enact repatriation to traditional
owners of ancestral remains and secret/sacred objects.
23
SCIENCE – RESEARCH
The Museum has maintained its formidable reputation in science research.
Anthropology & Archives
Researchers within the Anthropology Department continued with their
established high yield research projects, with a focus on documenting and
interpreting collections. This has produced major publications and exhibitions,
both physical and online.
Barry Craig continued his research as part of the ARC-Linkage Upper Sepik-
Central New Guinea Project. A number of papers from this project are prepared
for publication, with his co-workers Andrew Fyfe and Jill Bolton. These and
other materials are available on the associated website (http://www.uscngp.com/),
including an image „Gallery‟ of over 250 colour photographs showing people,
places and objects in the Upper Sepik-Central New Guinea region. Craig
organised the scanning, indexing and archiving of significant Melanesian
photographic collections, which was funded by a $10 000 grant from the Gordon
Darling Foundation. He identified, and prepared a complete illustrated inventory
and condition report of, the large number of components of the Apangai (Abelam
people, northern New Guinea) men‟s cult house, donated to the SA Museum by
Neil McLeod of Melbourne.
Philip Jones was in the United Kingdom on a research trip during May - June
2010 as part of an ARC Linkage Project to document the ethnographic collections
of Baldwin Spencer and Francis Gillen, in the British Museum and Manchester
University Museum. He continued his research into the history of German natural
science and ethnography in 19th century South Australia. From September to
December 2009, Dr Jones took up the Harold White Fellowship at National
Library of Australia to undertake research on the colonial and ethnographic artist,
George French Angas (1822-1886).
Peter Sutton‟s book, The politics of suffering: Indigenous Australia and the end
of the liberal consensus, was published by Melbourne University Press in July
2009. It stimulated much interest and debate, especially in the media, academia
and among the helping professions. It won the Manning Clark National Cultural
Award and was short-listed for the John Button Prize for political writing (winner
to be announced 3 September 2010). Sutton also published papers on Aboriginal
art, religion and politics, and anthropological history, and gave guest lectures at
universities in Auckland, Istanbul, London, Melbourne and Perth.
Philip Clarke was engaged in an extensive fieldwork program across the Top End
of the Northern Territory to consult with Senior Aboriginal Custodians on the
future of Secret Sacred Objects and Ancestral Remains held by the SA Museum.
The work was performed in partnership with the Northern Land Council and was
funded by the state and federally-funded Return of Indigenous Cultural Property
(RICP) project.
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The Indigenous communities Dr Clarke visited included Gunbalanya (Oenpelli),
Jabiru, Maningrida, Warruwi (South Goulburn Island), Yilpara (Blue Mud Bay)
and Yirrkala. With the support of the Waterhouse Club, Dr. Clarke undertook a
Central Australian expedition documenting Aboriginal rock art in July 2009. Dr.
Clarke was guest curator for the Aboriginal component of the Museum of
Economic Botany permanent exhibit in the Adelaide Botanic Gardens. He
continued his research and university teaching in ethnobotany, economic botany
and Aboriginal cosmology.
Biological Sciences
Biology research staff were successful in gaining new grant funding amounting to
more than $2.5M. These grants include major Australian Research Council
projects studying restoration genetics of fishes (M. Adams), the biodiversity and
population genetics of groundwater calcrete ecosystems of central Western
Australia (S. Cooper and M. Stevens) and environmental genomics (M. Stevens),
and additional large grants for research of Antarctic invertebrates (M. Stevens),
marine mammals (S. Donnellan) and desert skinks (S. Donnellan).
The complete mitochondrial genome for a monogenean parasite, Benedenia
seriolae, that infects farmed kingfish in Spencer Gulf, was published in the
International Journal for Parasitology by PhD student Elizabeth Perkins
(University of Adelaide) with collaborators S. Donnellan, T. Bertozzi and I.
Whittington (SA Museum).
Biology research staff supervised seven students to successful completion of their
PhD projects: Chris Izzo (supervised by S. Donnellan), Kate Muirhead
(supervised by S. Donnellan), Elizabeth Perkins (supervised by I. Whittington
and S. Donnellan), Rissa Williams (supervised by I. Whittington), Tessa Bradford
(supervised by S. Cooper), Elisa Sparrow (supervised by S. Cooper), Paul Oliver
(supervised by M. Lee and S. Cooper), all from the University of Adelaide.
S. Cooper and R. Leijs participated in a workshop on groundwater and
troglobiont ecosystems in Darwin, September 2009, which reported the discovery
of more than 850 new species of animals living underground in Australia. This
story was picked up by over 250 radio stations, newspapers, and science websites,
internationally.
S. Donnellan and M. Hutchinson were involved in the discovery of two new
families of snakes, in collaboration with colleagues in the US and France.
S. Donnellan was involved in the development of a new method for incorporating
evolutionary diversity into assessing the value of biodiversity for different
regions, published in one of the world leading journals Molecular Ecology.
T. Reardon, in collaboration with scientists from James Cook University,
reviewed the conservation status of Cape York microbats (over half the
threatened mammals species on Cape York are bats). In a month long field trip,
over 89 000 bat echolocation calls were recorded and analysed (including first
calls ever recorded for the Papuan Sheathtail bat) which together with trapping
effort , resulted in new insights for distributions, identification, taxonomy and
survey methods.
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Earth Sciences
The research programs into the chemistry and physics of ore deposit formation
made major advances during the year, including a number of neutron diffraction
and X-ray absorption experiments using our in situ cells were undertaken in
Australia, Japan and France.
The mineralogy group was particularly successful in obtain new funding from the
Australian Research Council for major projects investigating ore forming
hydrothermal reaction, bacterial platinum interactions and the development of a
gold biosensor. The funding received was $600,000.00. Provisional patents for
the gold biosensor were also filed.
Palaeontology staff have been leading international research teams working on
excavation of serial Ediacara fossil-bearing seafloors at the National Heritage
Listed Ediacara Fossil Site at Nilpena in the Flinders Ranges, and in the
discovery and identification of exceptionally preserved, new Cambrian fossils
from Emu Bay on Kangaroo Island. The team has assisted in highly popular local
community engagements and participated in documentary filming events for
Atlantic Productions with David Attenborough, ABC Catalyst, Japanese Open
University, and NASA Astrobiology, on the subject of the origins and evolution
of early animal life.
A new ARC research project aiming to put Australian Mesozoic fossils into a
global context began in 2009. As part of this program, a Waterhouse Club
expedition went to SW Qld to excavate recent finds and helped forge links with
local museums (Mike Lee).
High-resolution micro-CT scanning was used to generate virtual reality models of
important fossil specimens, such as the only known braincase of the giant snake
Wonambi, for scientific analysis as well as public display; this technology was
rapidly assimilated by other museum departments such as herpetology and
ichthyology (Peter Blias, Mike Lee).
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THE COLLECTIONS
The collections division within the South Australian Museum has again had a busy
year developing collections, addressing backlogs and improving collection
management standards. The large number of loans to and from the Museum attests to
the continuing high levels of collections access and research.
● Over 2 850 objects, lots and specimens were lent to 94 institutions across the
world in 2009-10.
● As part of the development of the Biodiversity Gallery approximatly four
thousand specimens and models have been prepared and installed in the new
Biodiversity gallery. This has been an enormous undertaking by all divisions
within the Museum.
● Collections acquisitions and digitisation continues to grow in line with the
targeted and strategic objectives set within Collections Management and
Research. Some 15 000 objects, lots and specimens have been added to the
collections and a further 31 787 records were digitised.
● Delivery of collections content to the World Wide Web is now underway. A
new web server has been purchased and installed. It will act as the Museum‟s
web portal to the Online Zoological Collections in Australian Museums and the
Atlas of Living Australia.
● The Australian Archaeology collections have been successfully relocated to new
stores in Hindmarsh. This has allowed for improved access to the collections
and an allied increase in student and research interest.
● Completion of the Preventive Conservation surveys and IPM programs for
Entomology and Ornithology and the treatment and improved storage of the
bark paintings collection were conservation highlights in 2009-10. Working with
ArtLab Australia, individual collection treatments and exhibition related
conservation programs have again been high on the Museum‟s agenda.
Acquisition highlights
Additions to the collections by way of donations, bequests, purchases and the Cultural
Gifts Program (CGP) represent an addition to the overall value of the Heritage
collections by some $350 000. Highlights include;
● Hoff Collection of Aboriginal artefacts, acquired under the CGP.
● The Murray Thompson Gold Collection, South Australian, acquired under the
CGP.
● Jim Kite spear, purchased with Board funds
● I warshield & 4 spears from Abelam, PNG, purchased with Museum and Board
funds.
● 35 lots consisting of objects and images relating to T G H Strehlow, purchased
with Board funds.
● A bark painting, of Baru the Crocodile, by the Yolngu artist, Waidjung. It is
correctly attributed to the 1948 American Australian Expedition to Arnhem
Land, and was collected by Charles Mountford, then gifted to Harold Sheard.
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Acquisition highlights (Cont.)
● A dug out canoe, known also as a „lipa lipa‟. The canoe was commissioned in
1962 by a former manager of Yirrkala. It was made by well known Yolgnu
traditional artist, Larrtjannga Ganambarr, born c. 1932. Purchased with
Museum and Board funds.
Above: Double-ended throwing club, Koonibba, S.A., 1920s. Donated by Hoff family
under Cultural Gifts Program.
Above: The Murray Thompson Gold Collection, South Australian, acquired under the
Cultural Gifts Program
Above:Jim Kite spear
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SA MUSEUM FOUNDATION
Along with the SA Museum, the Foundation was proud to announce the successful
completion of the Biodiversity Gallery in February this year. The South Australian
Museum Foundation engaged hundreds of donors for the development of the
exhibition.
With the Biodiversity Gallery project complete the Foundation continues its fund
raising activities on behalf of the Museum with collections targeted for acquisition.
The Foundation aims to constantly develop its existence and ability to work with, and
for, the museum, enhancing it for all visitors.
SUPPORT ORGANISATIONS
Friends of the South Australian Museum
The Friends of the South Australian Museum (FOSAM) continue their contribution as
a support group to the museum. In June 2009 the FOSAM hosted the South Australian
Governor at a reception celebrating its 45th birthday.
The FOSAM have capitalised on available resources, providing special tours for
community and tourist groups. During the summer of 2009-10 the FOSAM also
managed the organisation of the cruise ship tours. These tours involve considerable
time involvement and attract a fee. Funds raised as a result of these activities are
donated to the museum as part of the FOSAM‟s commitment as a supporter group. In
addition to the services with fees, the FOSAM coordinate the free daily tour for the
general public.
Member numbers to the FOSAM remain stable; however, efforts in improvement to
the membership count are continual. Currently the FOSAM provide an annual
program for their members including talks by scientists, visits to other museums and
behind the scenes tours of the SA Museum.
The Waterhouse Club
In 2009-10, the Waterhouse Club contributed $200 000 to the SA Museum
Foundation‟s fundraising program for the new Biodiversity Gallery. This was
generated through a very successful program of events and expeditions over recent
years, driven by a strong contingent of hard working volunteers and supportive
members. The museum acknowledged the Waterhouse Club‟s contribution by
announcing it as a “Key Partner” and “Major Financial Contributor” to the
development of the Biodiversity Gallery. In support of the opening, the Waterhouse
Club offered an innovative event titled “The Perversity in Diversity Cocktail Party” to
its members.
To improve its services to the museum, the Waterhouse Club also offers variances on
its expeditions. In the “Blood, Sweat and Tears” expeditions members are invited to
work in the field under the guidance of a museum scientist who coordinates all
aspects of the operation.
29
The “Rapid Response Group” consists of members who are available at short notice to
travel into the field to collect on behalf of the museum. Recently, the “Rapid
Response Group” has participated in activities in response to rain in the arid lands and
assisting with the provision of materials gallery development.
At end of the reporting period membership to the Waterhouse Club stood at 330
(including family membership). As many of the Club‟s expeditions are selling out
well in advance, the Committee is carrying out a thorough review of its operations to
ensure that it is meeting the needs of its membership and the SA Museum.
The Club aims are to build a community of support for the museum amongst the
opinion leaders of South Australia, to involve them in the good work that the museum
does with a schedule of innovative and entertaining events.
Major achievements of the Waterhouse Club for the 2009-10 period include:
„Aboriginal Art Ancient and Modern‟: An expedition to explore the artistic links
between ancient rock art and contemporary art in the area south east of Alice
Springs with Dr Philip Clarke (SA Museum).
„The Bat Rescue Expedition to Naracoorte‟ to assist in mapping the feeding
patterns of the endangered bent wing bat with Terry Reardon (SA Museum).
„To Arkaroola with Professor Ian Plimer‟. An interpretation of the geology of
Arkaroola with A/Prof Joel Brugger (SA Museum) and Prof Ian Plimer (University
of Adelaide).
„A Trilobites view of Cambrian Kangaroo Island‟. Excavate specimens from the
trilobite beds there and inspect the other outbreaks of the Cambrian bedding across
the island with the Dr Jim Gehling (SA Museum).
„An Invitation to Excavate An Amazing Dinosaur‟. Participate in the excavation of
a 30m titanosaur in south east Queensland while working with the Outback
Gondwana Foundation whose aim is to establish a museum on the site with Mike
Lee (SA Museum & University of Adelaide) and Dr Ben Kear (SA Museum
Honorary Research Associate).
Launch of the „The Adelie Blizzard‟ Douglas Mawson‟s forgotten newspaper held
in the Museum‟s Mawson collection and published for the first time.
Volunteer Support
The SA Museum is ever grateful for the outstanding support provided by volunteers in
all areas of operation. Front of house activities have been enhanced with volunteer
coordinated guided tours and the provision of assistance in a range of public programs
such as Science Week and Palaeontology Week. The Community Engagement team
continue to offer a comprehensive learning program for front of house based
volunteers, working closely with Science Centre staff. With the Biodiversity Gallery
opening in February 2010, volunteer learning has had a strong focus in this area to
incorporate the stories of this new gallery into their programs.
The second half of 2009 saw many of the front of house volunteers complete their
learning and mentor training program, and begin to take independent guided tours.
30
An increase from 19 to 40 fully trained front of house volunteers has enabled the
museum us to broaden the visitor program in 2010 by introducing specialist tours.
A variety of avenues have been used to publicly promote these tours and visitor
numbers are steadily increasing.
In 2010 the volunteers have also established a Newsletter committee and developed a
newsletter for the Volunteer team. Feedback about the first edition from the
Volunteers has been extremely positive.
WORK EXPERIENCE
As a component of its community engagement, the Museum maintained its efforts to
offer secondary and tertiary students appropriate work experience placements. A total
of 9 placements have been awarded across both science and public program divisions
for the reporting period.
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COMMERCIAL ACTIVITES
The museum is able to provide free programs and activities through the support of its
commercial activities. The continual development of commercial initiatives has
enabled the museum to increase the number of free programs and services provided to
visitors.
Venue Hire
The museum‟s venue hire opportunities continue to prosper. The newly opened
Biodiversity Gallery is an attractive tour option for many external groups hiring
function space within the museum. The Pacific Cultures Gallery is continuing to be a
popular event location as is the main foyer. The museum has increased its targeted
promotional campaigns to audiences that „dare to be different‟ and have a function
somewhere outside of the norm.
Sponsorship/Business Development
The museum continues to develop and maintain partnerships with a wide range of
commercial organisations to assist with the development and operation of programs
and events. Both in-kind and cash support has enabled the museum to host large in-
bound travelling exhibitions and provide associated community events.
The museum remains ever grateful for the support of all its sponsor partners and
donors.
MEDIA
Marketing and public relation endeavours have positively contributed to an increase in
„media hits‟ where the museum is mentioned. For the 2009-10 period, the SA
Museum recorded 849 total media mentions, a 17.5% increase compared to that in
2008-09. The increase in media mentions has been a result of the museum‟s strong
editorial presence in local and national media services, notable media groups
mentioning the museum are: The Australian, The Advertiser, The Messenger,
Australian Geographic, SA Life, Adelaide Review, Channel 9 Adelaide, ABC 891
Radio and ABC 7:30 Report.
Strategic allegiances with media partners (The Adelaide Review, Adelaice Central
Plaza, Adelaide‟s Child and ABC 891 Adelaide) have also enabled the museum to
effectively promote exhibitions and programs.
The museum‟s marketing and PR team have reached out to the general public via a
quarterly distribution of 10 000 „What‟s On‟ leaflets to hotels, restaurants, cafés
libraries and subscribers; produces biannually 5 000 newsletters and sends
e-newsletters to over 1 200 subscribers every month.
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WEBSITE
The museum‟s web sites have been frequently updated, providing visitors and
information seekers with valuable, up-to-date information on exhibitions, programs,
events, collections and research. The museum‟s main site, samuseum.sa.gov.au had
1 380 151 visits during 2009-10. Two of the museum‟s coordinated exhibitions; The
Waterhouse Natural History Art Prize & ANZANG Nature and Photography
Competition have independent web sites. The Waterhouse exhibition site
(thewaterhouse.com.au), recorded 99 448 visits while the ANZANG site recorded
over 70 000 visits for 2009-10. Artists and photographers seeking entry into these
competitions are also able to do so via these websites.
Background updates to the main museum website is nearing completion, once
finished the site will be more versatile and adaptable to change. During the 2010-11
financial year the museum aims to expand its online interaction with visitors,
incorporating an interface in which people can register for events and make donations
via its web site.
Capitalising on an ever growing social networking phemomena, the SA Museum has
established a Facebook fan page with hundreds of people subscribed to updates on
programs and events.
GREENING OF GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS REPORTING
The Museum maintains ever committed to improving energy efficiency. In
conjunction with contracted facilities maintenance, the museum‟s executive have
implemented a full recycling and biodegradable refuge removal system throughout all
work spaces on the North Terrace site. In addition to this, the museum has formed an
alliance with Carbon Planet which works towards improving energy usage.
ENERGY EFFICIENCY ACTION PLAN REPORTING
The South Australian Museum‟s Energy Efficiency Action Plan Reporting is captured
in the Department of Premier and Cabinet reporting.
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3. PUBLICATIONS, TEACHING & DISSEMINATION OF RESEARCH –
MUSEUM STAFF 2009-10
Museum staff contributed 1996 hours towards tertiary teaching at various
Universities.
Research collaborations maintained 30 partnerships (5 with other museums, 22 with
Universities and 3with other research institutions).
Museum staff published 184 scholarly publications, 51 other publications and
presented a further 117 academic & public lectures, workshops and conference
papers.
3.1 Books and monographs:
Daniels C.B. (2010). Adelaide Water of a City: Wakefield Press Adelaide 600,000
words, 30 chapters, 132 boxes, 130 authors. 581 pp.
McArthur, Archie (2010). A guide to Camponotus Ants of South Australia. South
Australian Museum, Adelaide.
Roetman P.E.J and Daniels, C.B. (2009). The Possum-Tail Tree. Barbara Hardy
Centre, Adelaide. 144 pp.
Strachan, R., Alsop, I., Friend, C and Miller, S. (2010). An Excursion Guide to the
Moine Geology of the Northern Highlands of Scotland. National Museums Scotland
Publishing, Edinburgh. 298pp.
Sutton, Peter (2009). The Politics of Suffering: Indigenous Australia and the End of
the Liberal Consensus. Melbourne University Press, Melbourne.
Sutton, Peter (2010). Native Title in Australia: an Ethnographic Perspective.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521011906 [paperback edition of
2003 hard cover book ISBN 0521812585].
Tyler, M.J., and Knight, F. (2009). Field Guide to the Frogs of Australia. CSIRO
Publishing, Collingwood, Australia.
Tyler, M.J., and Doughty, P. (2009). Field Guide to Frogs of Western Australia.
4th
Revised Edition, Western Australian Museum, Perth.
Tyler, M.J. (2009). Yes, It‟s True. Frogs are Cannibals. (Korean Language Edition).
Tyler, M.J. (2010). Yes, It‟s True. Frogs are Cannibals (Chinese Language Edition).
Walshe, K. (ed) (2009). Roonka, fugitive traces and climatic mischief. Hyde Park
Press, Adelaide.
34
3.2 Chapters in books:
Akerman, K (2009). Interaction between humans and megafauna depicted in
Australian rock art? Antiquity 83(322).
Available at <http://www.antiquity.ac.uk/projgall/akerman322/
Akerman, K., Skyring, F. and Yu, S. (2010). The Indigenous cultural heritage values
associated with pearl shell and pearling for the west Kimberley coast.
Unpublished report prepared for the Kimberley Land Council for National Heritage
Listing for the Kimberley Region.
Akerman, K. (2010), 'Aboriginal Dress in the Kimberley, Western Australia' in the
Berg Encyclopedia of World Dress and Fashion, edited by Joanne B. Eicher, Vol.7,
Australia, New Zealand, and the Pacific Islands, edited by Margaret Maynard, pp. 53-
59. Oxford: Berg Publishers.
Bowie, J.H., Jackway, R.J., Separovic, F., Carver, J.A. and Tyler, M.J. (2009)
Host-defense peptides from the secretion of the skin glands of frogs and toads:
membrane-active peptides from the genera Litoria, Uperoleia and Crinia. Chap.
15, CRC Press, Taylor and Francis, pp.333-355.
Clarke, P.A. (2009). Aboriginal culture and the Riverine environment. Pp.142-161 in
J.T. Jennings (ed) „The Natural History of the Riverland and Murraylands‟. Royal
Society of South Australia, Adelaide.
Clarke, P.A. (2010). Economic botanists, ethnobotany and Aboriginal plant use.
Pp.62-5 in P. Emmett & T. Kanellos (eds) The Museum of Economic Botany at the
Adelaide Botanic Garden. A Souvenir. Board of the Botanic Gardens and State
Herbarium, Adelaide.
Daniels C.B., Argue J.J, Beecham S., Clark, R.D.S., Howard, J.R., Jones, D.S.,
Marks, R., McKay, J.M., Roetman, P.E.J., and Smith K.E. (2010) Chapter 1
Introduction In: Daniels C.B. (Ed) Adelaide Water of a City Wakefield Press
Adelaide. Pages 36-51.
Daniels C.B., Argue J.J, Beecham S., Clark, R.D.S., Howard, J.R., Jones, D.S.,
Marks, R., McKay, J.M., Roetman, P.E.J., and Smith K.E. (2010) Chapter 29
Conclusion In: Daniels C.B. (Ed) Adelaide Water of a City Wakefield Press Adelaide.
Pages 562-571.
Daniels. C.B., Johnston, G.R., and Gray C.J. (2010) Chapter 5 Biodiversity of the
Waterways In: Daniels C.B. (Ed) Adelaide Water of a City Wakefield Press Adelaide.
Pages 106-128.
Gehling, J.G., Kelly, T., Gell, P., Westall, K., and Ingelton, G. (2010) Chapter 13
Climate Change. In: Daniels C.B. (Ed) Adelaide Water of a City Wakefield Press
Adelaide. Pages 275-285.
35
Greenslade, Penelope (2009). Soil invertebrate diversity of different landscape units
at Cravens Peak with a focus on Collembola. In: Cravens Peak Scientific Study
Report. Geography Monograph Series. The Royal Geographical Society of
Queensland Inc. Brisbane, Queensland. Pp 151–198.
Hodgson, D.A., Abram, N., Anderson, J., Bargelloni, L., Barrett, P., Bentley, M.J.,
Bertler, N.A.N., Chown, S., Clarke, A., Convey, P., Crame, A., Crosta, X., Curran,
M., di Prisco, G., Francis, J.E., Goodwin, I., Gutt, J., Massé, G., Masson-Delmotte,
V., Mayewski, P.A., Mulvaney, R., Peck, L., Pörtner, H-O., Röthlisberger, R.,
Stevens, M.I., Summerhayes, C.P., van Ommen, T., Verde, C., Verleyen, E.,
Vyverman, W., Wiencke, C., Zane, L. (2009). “Antarctic climate and environment
history in the pre-instrumental period”. Chapter 3 in: Turner, J., Convey, P., di Prisco,
G., Mayewski, P.A., Hodgson, D.A., Fahrbach, E., Bindschadler, R., Gutt, J. (eds).
“Antarctic Climate Change and the Environment”. Scientific Committee for Antarctic
Research, Cambridge.
Hutchinson, M. N. (2009) Reptiles and Amphibians. In: Jennings, J. (ed.) Natural
History of the Riverland and Murraylands. Royal Society of South Australia,
Adelaide, pp 283-300.
Peterson, K., Cotton, J.A., Gehling, J.G. and Pisani, D. (2009). The Ediacaran
emergence of bilaterians: congruence between the genetic and the geological fossil
records. In: M.J. Telford & D.T.J. Littlewood, eds. Animal Biology: Genomes,
Fossils, and Trees, Oxford University Press. Ch. 2, p. 15-23.
Matthews, E. G., Lawrence, J. F., Bouchard, P., Steiner, W. E. Jr and Slipinski, S. A.
(2010) Family Tenebrionidae. Pp 574 – 659 in Beutel, R. G. and Leschen, R. A. B.
(eds) Handbook of Zoology. A Natural History of the Phyla of the Animal Kingdom.
Volume IV – Arthropoda: Insecta. Part 38. Coleoptera, Beetles. Volume 2:
Systematics. Part 2. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter.
Reed, L. (2009) „A vertebrate CSI‟. Pp. 37-40. In SA Museum. “The Fossil Hunters”.
South Australian Museum, Adelaide.
Sheil, R.J., Smales, L., Sterrer, W., Duggan, I.C., Pichelin, S and Green, J. D. (2009).
Phylum Gnathifera. Chapt 8 in Ed Richardson D. The New Zealand Inventory of
Biodiversity: Volume 1. Kingdom Animalia. Canterbury University Press,
Christchurch.
Pp137-158.
Sutton, Peter. (2009). Arthur Koo‟ekka Pambegan Jr. In Brenda Croft (ed), Culture
warriors: National Indigenous Art Triennial (Second revised edition), pp32-36.
Canberra: National Gallery of Australia.
Sutton, Peter. (2009). Craig Koomeeta. In Nicole Foreshew & Brian Parkes (eds),
Menagerie: Contemporary Indigenous Sculpture, pp76-79. Sydney: Object:
Australian Centre for Craft and Design and The Australian Museum.
36
Sutton, Peter. (2009). Leigh Namponan. In Nicole Foreshew & Brian Parkes (eds),
Menagerie: Contemporary Indigenous Sculpture, pp102-103. Sydney: Object:
Australian Centre for Craft and Design and The Australian Museum.
Turner, J., Arthern, R., Bromwich, D., Marshall, G., Worby, T., Bockheim, J., di
Prisco, G., Verde, C., Convey, P., Roscoe, H., Jones, A., Vaughan, D., Woodworth,
P., Scambos, T., Cook, A., Lenton, A., Comiso, J., Gugliemin, M., Summerhayes, C.,
Meredith, M., Naveira-Garabato, A., Chown, S., Stevens, M.I., Adams, B., Worland,
R., Hennion, F., Huiskes, A., Bergstrom, D., Hodgson, D., Bindschadler, R., Bargagli,
R., Metzl, N., van der Veen, K., Monaghan, A., Speer, K., Rintoul, S., Hellmer, H.,
Jacobs, S., Heywood, K., Holland, D., Yamanouchi, T., Barbante, C., Bertler, N.,
Boutron, C., Hong, S., Mayewski, P., Fastook, J., Newsham, K., Robinson, S.,
Forcarda, J., Trathan, P., Smetacek, V., Gutt, J., Pörtner, H-O., Peck, L., Gili, J-M.,
Wiencke, C., Fahrbach, E., Atkinson, A., Webb, D., Isla, E., Orejas, C., Rossi. S.,
Shanklin, J. (2009). “The Instrumental Period”. Chapter 4 in: Turner, J., Convey, P.,
di Prisco, G., Mayewski, P.A., Hodgson, D.A., Fahrbach, E., Bindschadler, R., Gutt,
J. (eds) “Antarctic Climate Change and the Environment. Scientific Committee for
Antarctic Research”, Cambridge.
Turner, J., Shanklin, J., Sparrow, M., Arthern, R., Fleming, A., Bromwich, A.,
Marshall, G., Worby, T., Bockheim, J., di Prisco, G., Verde, C., Convey, P., Wang,
Z., Roscoe, H., Jones, A., Vaughan, D., Woodworth, P., Scambos, T., Cook, A.,
Lenton, A., Jenkins, A., Comiso, J., Gugliemin, M., Summerhayes, C., Meredith, M.,
Naveira-Garabato, A., Chown, S., Stevens, M.I., Adams, B., Worland, R., Hennion,
F., Huiskes, A., Bergstrom, D., Hodgson, D., Bindschadler, R., Bargagli, R., Metzl,
N., Arbetter, T., van der Veen, K., Monaghan, A., Speer, K., Rintoul, S., Hellmer, H.,
Jacobs, S., Heywood, K., Holland, D., Yamanouchi, T., Barbante, C., Bertler, N.,
Boutron, C., Hong, S., Mayewski, P., Fastook, J., Fahrbach, E., Webb, D., Clarke, A.,
Gutt, J., Linse, K. (2009). “Observations, Data Accuracy and Tools”. Chapter 2 in:
Turner, J., Convey, P., di Prisco, G., Mayewski P.A., Hodgson, D.A., Fahrbach, E.,
Bindschadler, R., Gutt, J. (eds). “Antarctic Climate Change and the Environment.
Scientific Committee for Antarctic Research”, Cambridge.
Tyler, M.J. (2010). Adhesive dermal secretions of the Amphibia, with particular
reference to the Australian Limnodynastid genus Notaden. In J. Byren and I.
„Grunwald (eds.) „Adhesion Phenomena in nature. From Structure to Application‟.
Springer, Berlin.
Walker K.F., Madden, C.P., Williams, C.R.,. Fricker, S.R., Michael C. Geddes,
M.C., Goonan, P.M., Kokkinn, M.J., McEvoy, P.K., Shiel, R.J., Tsymbal, V. (2009).
Freshwater Invertebrates. Pp.283-305- in J.T. Jennings (Ed.) „The Natural History of
the Riverland and Murraylands‟. Royal Society of South Australia, Adelaide.
Walshe, K. (2009) „What happened to Roonka‟; „Australian Archaeology and the
emergence of Roonka‟ and „Rounding up Roonka‟. Parts One and Four in Roonka
edited by K. Walshe.
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Warburton, N. M. and Prideaux, G. J. (2009). Functional pedal morphology of the
extinct tree-kangaroo Bohra (Diprotodontia: Macropodinae). Pp. 137-151 in G. C.
Coulson & M. D. B. Eldridge (eds) „Macropods: The Biology of Kangaroos,
Wallabies and Rat-kangaroos‟. CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne.
Whittington, I.D. (2010). Parasitology at the University of New England. In
Chapter 12, Parasitology at Armidale, New South Wales. In: A History of
Parasitology in Australia and Papua New Guinea, Beveridge I. & O‟Donoghue P.J.
(Eds.), pp. 215-217. Raw Publishing, Blackburn, Victoria, Australia.
38
3.3 Scholarly journal papers:
Barton D.P., Beaufrere Charles, Justine Jean-Lou and Whittington Ian D. (2009).
Polyopisthocotylean monogeneans from carangid fishes off Queensland, Australia and
New Caledonia, with a description of Heteromicrocotyloides megaspinosus sp. nov.
Acta Parasitologica 54: 205-217.
Bilusich, D., Jackway, R.J., Musgrave, I.F., Tyler, M.J., and Bowie, J.H. (2009). The
host-defence skin peptide profiles of Peron‟s Tree Frog Litoria peronii in winter and
summer. Sequence determination by electrospray mass spectrometry and activities of
the peptides. Rapid. Commun. Mass. Spectrom. 23: 2628 – 2636.
Black, A., Carpenter, G. and Pedler, L. (2009). Distribution and habitats of the Thick-
billed Grasswren amytornis textilis, subspecies myall. South Australian Ornithologist
35 (7): 161-177.
Black, A. B. and Longmore, N. W. (2009). Notes on grasswren eggs in Len Harvey‟s
collection, Museum Victoria. Australian Field Ornithologist 26(4): 132-141.
Blee, Alisa J., Walshe, Keryn, Pring Allan, Jamie S. Quinton and Claire E. Lenehan
(2010). Towards the identification of plant and animal binders on Australian stone
knives. Talanta, on line publication through:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.talanta.2010.05.044
Bourne, S. J. & Reed, E. H. (2009) The Australian Fossil Mammal sites
(Riversleigh/Naracoorte). World Heritage. 52: 46-47.
Bradford, T., Adams, M., Humphreys, W. F., Austin, A. D. and Cooper, S. J. B.
(2010). DNA barcoding of stygofauna uncovers cryptic amphipod diversity in a
calcrete aquifer in Western Australia‟s arid zone. Molecular Ecology Resources 10:
41-50.
Brugger, J., Pring, A., Ryan, C., Reith, F, Etschmann, B., Lui, W., O‟Neill, B., and
Ngothai, Y. (2009). Probing ore deposit formation: new insight and challenges from
nuclear microprobe synchrotron and neutron studies. Journal of Radiation Physics
and Chemistry, 79: 151-161, 10.1016/l-radphyschem.2009.03.071
Catalano, S.R., Hutson, K.S., Ratcliff, R.M. & Whittington, I.D. (2010).
Redescriptions of two species of microcotylid monogeneans from three arripid hosts
in southern Australian waters. Systematic Parasitology 76: 211-222.
Clarke, P.A. (2009). An overview of Australian Aboriginal Ethnoastronomy.
Archaeoastronomy. The Journal of Astronomy in Culture. Vol. 21: pp.39-58.
Compston, W., Zhang, Z., Cooper, J. A., Ma, G. and Jenkins, R. J. F. (2008). Further
SHRIMP geochronology on the Early Cambrian of South China. American Journal of
Science, Dunyi Liu Special Issue: part II, 308: (4), 399 – 420.
39
Convey, P., Stevens, M.I., Hodgson, D.A., Hillenbrand, C-D., Clarke, A., Pugh,
P.J.A., Smellie, J.L., Cary, S.C. (2009). Antarctic terrestrial life – ancient evolutionary
persistence or recent colonisation? Quaternary Science Reviews, available online
doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2009.08.015 #equal lead contributors.
Convey, P., Stevens, M.I., Hodgson, D.A., Hillenbrand, C-D., Clarke, A., Pugh,
P.J.A., Smellie, J.L., Cary, S.C. (2009). Antarctic terrestrial life – ancient evolutionary
persistence or recent colonisation? Quaternary Science Reviews 28: 3035-3048 #equal
lead contributors.
Cook, N.J., Ciobanu, C.L., Pring, A. Skinner, W., Shimizu, M, Danyushevsky, L.
Saini-Eidukat, B and Melcher, F. (2009). Trace and minor elements in sphalerite: a
LA-ICPMS study. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 73: 4761-4791.
Craig, B. (2009). The Pacific Cultures Gallery in the South Australian Museum from
1895 to 2007. Pacific Arts NS. 8: 18-31.
Darrenougue, N., de Deckker, P., Fitzsimmons, K., Norman, M., Reed, E.H., van der
Kaars, S. and Fallon, S. (2009) A late Pleistocene record of aeolian sedimentation in
Blanche Cave, Naracoorte, South Australia. Quaternary Science Reviews. 28: 2600 –
2615.
Dennis, S.D., R.J. Lavigne and J.G. Dennis. (2010). Hemiptera
(Heteroptera/Homoptera) as prey of robber flies (Diptera: Asilidae) with unpublished
records. Journal of the Entomological Research Society 12(1): 27-47.
Deveney M.R. and Whittington, I.D.(2010). Three new species of Benedenia
Diesing, 1858 from the Great Barrier Reef, Australia with a key to species of the
genus. Zootaxa 2348: 1-22.
Donnellan, S.C., Couper, P.J., Saint, K.M., Wheaton, L. (2009). Systematics of the
Carlia „fusca’ complex (Reptilia: Scincidae) from northern Australia. Zootaxa 2227:
1–31.
Donnellan, S.C., Aplin, K.P. and Bertozzi, T. (2010). Species boundaries in the Rana
arfaki group (Anura: Ranidae) and phylogenetic relationships to other New Guinean
Rana. Zootaxa 2496: 49–62.
Elliott, P., Turner , P., Jensen, P,. Koltsich, U. and Pring, A. (2009). Description and
crystal structure of nyholmite, a mineral related to hurealite, from Broken Hill, New
South Wales:. Mineralogical Magazine 73: 723-735.
Fairbrother, L., Shaoter, J., Brugger, J., Southam, G Pring, A., and Reith, F. (2009).
Effects of the cyanide-producing bateriun chromobaterium violaceum on ultraflat gold
surfaces. Chemical Geology 265: 313-320.
Fyfe, A. (2009). Exploring Spatial Relationships between Material Culture and
Language in the Upper Sepik and Central New Guinea. Oceania 79: 121-161.
40
Garcia_Bellido, D.C., Paterson, J.R., Edcombe, G.D., Jago, J.B., Gehling, J.G. &
Lee, M.S.Y., (2009). The bivalved arthropods Isoxys and Tuzoia with soft-part
preservation from the lower Cambrian Emu Bay Shale Lagestätte (Kangaroo Island,
Australia). Palaeonotlogy, 52: 1221-1241.
Gehling, J. G., and Droser, M. L. (2009). Textured organic surfaces associated with the
Ediacara biota in South Australia. Earth Science Reviews 96: 196-206.
Gershwin, L., and Zeidler, W. (2010). Csiromedusa medeopolis: a remarkable
Tasmanian medusa (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa: Narcomedusae) comprising a new family,
genus and species. Zootaxa 2439: 24-34.
Godfrey, S. S. & Hutchinson, M. N. (2009) Notes on diet and size at maturity of
Ctenotus (Scincidae) of the mallee of South Australia. Herpetofauna (accepted)
Goldsworthy, S. D., McKenzie, J., Page, B. , Lancaster, M. L., Shaughnessy, P. D.,
Wynen, L. P., Robinson, S. A., Peters, K. J., Baylis, A. M. M. and McIntosh, R. R.
(2009). Fur seals at Macquarie Island: post-sealing colonisation, trends in abundance
and hybridisation of three species. Polar Biology 32: 1473-1486.
Greenslade, P. (2010). South Shetlands Collembola fauna revisited. Antarctic
Science doi:10.1017/S095410200999071X.
Greenslade P. (2010). Did ants initiate a population explosion of a coccoid plant pest
on an islet in the Coral Sea? Addendum to: Climate variability, biological control and
an insect pest outbreak on Australia‟s Coral Sea islets: lessons for invertebrate
conservation. Journal of Insect Conservation doi:10.1007/s10841-010-9268-4.
Greenslade, P., Reid, I. and Packer, I. (2010). Short term effects of herbicides on
some invertebrate fauna of wheat fields.Soil Biology and Biochemistry on line April
2010 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2010.03.009
Greenslade, P. and Smith, D. (2010). Short-term effects of wild fire on invertebrates
in coastal heathland in southeastern Australia. Pacific Conservation Biology 16.
Grey, I.E., Macrae, C.M., Mumme, W.G and Pring, A. Townendite, (2010).
Na8ZrSi6O18, a new uranium-bearing lovozerite group mineral from the Ilimaussaq
alkaline comples, Southern Greenland. American Mineralogist, 95: 646-650.
Guzik, M. T., Cooper, S. J. B., Humphreys, W. F., and Austin, A. D. (2009). Fine-
scale comparative phylogeography of a sympatric sister species triplet of subterranean
diving beetles from a single calcrete aquifer in Western Australia. Molecular Ecology
18: 3683-3698.
Guzinski J., Bull, C.M., Donnellan, S.C., Gardner, M.G. (2009). Relatedness and
inbreeding of an Australian reptile tick Bothriocroton hydrosauri. Molecular Ecology
18: 227–234.
41
Halt, M. N., Kupriyanova, E. K., Cooper, S. J. B., and Rouse G. W. (2009) Species
status of Galeolaria caespitosa (Annelida, Serpulidae) inferred from nuclear and
mitochondrial gene sequences and morphology. Invertebrate Systematics 23: 205-222.
Hamilton-Bruce, R.J., and Kear, B.P. (2010). A possible succineid snail from
Lower Cretaceous non-marine deposits of the Griman Creek Formation at Lightning
Ridge, New South Wales. Alcheringa. 34: 000-000. ISSN 0311-5518.
Hammer, M.P., Unmack, P.J., Adams, M., Johnson, J.B., Walker, K.F. (2010).
Phylogeographic structure in the threatened Yarra pygmy perch Nannoperca obscura
(Teleostei: Percichthyidae) has major implications for declining populations.
Conservation Genetics 11: 213-223
Hendrich, L. and Watts, C.H.S. (2010). An endemic predaceous water beetle from
the Murchison River in Western Australia – Antiporus kalbarriensis sp. n,.
(Coleoptera: Dytiscidae, Hydroporinanae, Hydroporini). .Zootaxa 2338: 35-42
Hutchinson, M. N., Doughty, P. & Oliver, P. (2009). Taxonomic revision of the
stone geckos (Squamata: Diplodactylidae: Diplodactylus) of southern Australia.
Zootaxa 2167: 25–46.
Hutchinson, M. N. & Eaton, J. (2009). Diporiphora reginae (Squamata: Agamidae)
in South Australia. Herpetofauna 39: 53-57.
Jackway, R.J., Maselli, V.M., Musgrave, I.F., Maclean, M.J., Tyler, M.J. and Bowie,
J.H. (2009). Skin peptides from anurans of the Litoria rubella group: sequence
determination using electrospray mass spectrometry. Opioid activity of two major
peptides. Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom. 23: 1189-1195.
Jones, P.J. and Kruse, P.D., 2009. New Middle Cambrian bradoriids (Arthropoda) from the Georgina Basin, central Australia. Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists 37: 55-86.
Kawakami, T., Butlin, R. K., Adams, M., Paull, D. J. and Cooper S. J. B. (2009). Re-
examination of a proposed case of stasipatric speciation: phylogeography of the
Australian morabine grasshoppers (Vandiemenella viatica species group). Molecular
Ecology 18: 3429-3442
Kearn G.C., Whittington I.D. and Evans-Gowing R. (2010). A new genus and new
species of microbothriid monogenean (Platyhelminthes) with a functionally enigmatic
reproductive system, parasitic on the skin and mouth lining of the largetooth sawfish,
Pristis microdon in Australia. Acta Parasitologica 55: 115-122.
Kemper, C., Medlin, G. C. and Bachmann, M. (2010). The discovery and history of
the Heath Mouse Pseudomys shortridgei (Thomas, 1907) in South Australia.
Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia 134(1): 125-138.
Kolesik, P., Adair, R.J, and Eick, G. (2010) Six new species of Asphondylia (Diptera:
Cecidomyiidae) damaging flower buds and fruits of Australian Acacia (Mimosaceae).
Syst. Ent. 35, 250-267.
42
Kolesik, P., Rice, A.D., and Wirthensohn, M.G. (2009) Procontarinia pustulata, a
new gall midge (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) feeding on mango, Mangifera indica L.
(Anarcadiaceae) in northern Australia and Papua New Guinea. Aust. J. Ent. 48, 310-
316.
King, R.A. (2009). Ampeliscidae. In: Lowry, J.K. & Myers, A.A. (Eds) (2009)
Benthic Amphipoda (Crustacea: Peracarida) of the Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
Zootaxa, 2260: 132–142.
King, R.A. (2009). Redescription of the freshwater amphipod Austrochiltonia
australis (Sayce) (Crustacea: Amphipoda, Chiltoniidae), Memoirs of Museum
Victoria 66: 85–93.
King, R.A. (2009). Two new genera and species of chiltoniid amphipods (Crustacea:
Amphipoda: Talitroidea) from freshwater mound springs in South Australia, Zootaxa,
2293: 35–52.
Kruse, PD, Jago, JB & Laurie, JR, 2009. Recent developments in Australian Cambrian biostratigraphy. Journal of Stratigraphy 33: 35-47. Lancaster, M., Cooper, S.J.B., Carthew, S., and Taylor, A. (2009). Microsatellite
markers for the Common ringtail possum (Pseudocheirus peregrinus) and their
amplification in other Pseudocheirids. Permanent Genetic Resources Note 1535.
Lavigne, R.J, A. Young and Richard Glatz . 2010 (2009). Distribution and behaviour
of Mauropteron pelago (Walker, 1849) (Insecta, Diptera, Asilidae) in South Australia.
The South Australian Naturalist 83(2): 69-77.
Lavigne, R.J. (2010) A new species of Cerdistus (Insecta: Diptera: Asilidae) from
South Australia. The South Australian Naturalist 84(1): 7–14.
Lee, M.S.Y., Hutchinson, M.N., Worthy, T.H., Archer, M., Tennyson, A.J.D.,
Worthy, J.P. & Scofield, R.P. (2009). Miocene skinks and geckos reveal long-term
conservatism of New Zealand‟s lizard fauna. Biology Letters 5: 833-837.
Lee, M.S.Y., Hutchinson M.N., Trevor H. Worthy , T.H., Michael Archer M.
Tennyson A.J.D. , Worthy J.P., Scofield R.P. (2009). Miocene skinks
(Lygosominae) and geckos (Diplodactylidae) reveal long-term conservatism of New
Zealand's lizard fauna. Biology Letters 6: 833-837 (doi:10.1098/rsbl.2009.0440)
Lee, M.S.Y., Camens, A. B. (2009). Strong and surprising morphological support
for the molecular evolutionary tree of mammals. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 22:
2243-2257. doi:10.1111/j.1420-9101.2009.01843.x
Leijs, R., Roudnew, B., Mitchell, J.G. and Humphreys, W.F. (2009). A new method
for sampling stygofauna from groundwater fed marshlands. Speleobiology Notes 1:
12-13.
43
Leijs, R., Roudnew, B. and Watts, C.H.S. (2010). Paroster extraordinarius sp. nov.:
a new stygobitic diving beetle from the Flinders Ranges, with notes on other diving
beetles from the hyporheic in South Australia (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae). Australian
Journal of Entomology 49: 66-72.
Maclean, M.J., and Tyler, M.J. (2009). Temporal release characteristics of cane toad
parotoid gland secretions following benign electrical stimulation. Appl. Herpetol. 6:
397– 399.
MacRae,C.M., Wilson, N.C., Brugger, J. and Pownceby, M. (2009). Quantitative
cathodoluminescence mapping with application to a Kalgoorlie Scheelite. Microscopy
and Microanalysis, 15: 222–230, doi:10.1017/S1431927609090308.
McArthur, A.J. (2009). New species, new status and new synonymy for Camponotus
from Australia (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) Myrmecol. News Wien 12: 273-286.
McDowell, M. C., and Medlin, G. C. (2009). Using the diet of the barn owl (Tyto
alba) as an indicator of small vertebrate abundance in the Channel Country, south-
western Queensland. Australian Mammalogy 31: 75–80.
McGaughran, A., Convey, P., Redding, G.P., Stevens, M.I. (2009). Temporal and
spatial metabolic rate variation in an Antarctic springtail. Journal of Insect
Physiology, available online doi:10.1016/j.jinsphys. 2009.09.003
McGaughran, A., Torricelli, G., Carapelli, A., Frati, F., Stevens, M. I., Convey, P.,
Hogg, I. D. (2009). Contrasting phylogeographic patterns for springtails reflect
different evolutionary histories between the Antarctic Peninsula and continental
Antarctica. Journal of Biogeography available online doi:10.1111/j.1365-
2699.2009.02178.x
McGaughran, A., Convey, P., Redding, G.P., Stevens, M.I. (2009). Temporal and
spatial metabolic rate variation in an Antarctic springtail. Journal of Insect Physiology
55: 130-135.
McGaughran, A., Convey, P., Redding, G.P., Stevens, M.I. (2010) Temporal and
spatial metabolic rate variation in an Antarctic springtail. Journal of Insect Physiology
56: 57-64.
McGaughran, A., Convey, P., Stevens, M.I., Chown, S.L. (2010) Metabolic rate,
genetic and microclimate variation among springtail populations from sub-Antarctic
Marion Island. Polar Biology 33: 909-918.
Madden, C.P. (2010). Key to genera of larvae of Australian Chironomidae (Diptera).
Museum Victoria Science Reports 12: 1–31.
Madden, C.P. (2010) Aquatic macro-invertebrates of Fleurieu Peninsula Parks The
South Australian Naturalist 84 (1): 31-37.
44
Malekian, M., Cooper, S. J. B., Norman, J. A., Christidis, L., and Carthew, S. M.
(2010). Molecular systematics and evolutionary origins of the genus Petaurus
(Marsupialia: Petauridae) in Australia and New Guinea. Molecular Phylogenetics and
Evolution 54: 122-135.
Matthews, E. G. and Monteith, G. B. (2010). Monteithium storeyi, a new species of
Adeliini (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) from the wet tropics of Queensland, Australia.
Australian Entomologist 36(4): 201 – 206.
Mecke, S., Doughty, P., Donnellan, S.C. (2009). A new species of Eremiascincus
(Reptilia: Squamata: Scincidae) from the Great Sandy Desert and Pilbara Coast,
Western Australia and reassignment of eight species from Glaphyromorphus to
Eremiascincus. Zootaxa 2246: 1-20.
Millar, N.L., Bradley, T.A., Walsh, N.A., Appleyard, R.C., Tyler, M.J. and Murrell,
G.A.C. (2009). Frog glue enhances rotator cuff repair in a laboratory cadavaric
model. J.Shoulder Elbow Surgery. 18: 639 – 645.
Mills, S.J., Birch, W.D., Kampf A.R. Christy, A.G., Pluth, J.J. Pring, A., Raudsepp,
M. and Chen, Y-S., (2010). Kapundaite, (Na,Ca)2Fe3+
4(PO4)4(OH)3.H2O, a new
phosphate species from Toms quarry, South Australia: Description and structural
relationship to mélonjosephite. American Mineralogist, 95: 754-760.
Mulder, E. and Smales, L.R. (2009). Parasites of Rattus coletti (Rodentia: Muridae)
from the Adelaide River floodplain, Northern Territory, and comparison with
assemblages in other Rattus species. . Australian Journal of Zoology 57: 377-383.
Mumme, W.G., Grey, I.E., Birch, W.D., Pring, A., Bougerol, C. and Wilson, N.C.
(2010). Cousellite, CaNa3AlMg3F14 a new rhombohedral pyrochlore with 1:3 ordering
in both A and B sites from the Cleveland Mine, Tasmania, Australia. American
Mineralogist. 95: 736-740
Myers, S.A., Gardner, M.G., Kleindorfer, S., Donnellan, S.C. (2009). New Holland
Honeyeater (Phylidonyris novaehollandiae) microsatellites; isolation and
characterisation of 14 novel markers using an enrichment method. Molecular Ecology
Resources 9: 1052-4. (doi: 10.1111/j.1755-0998.2009.02572.x).
New, T.R., Yen,A.L., Sands, D.P.A., Greenslade, P., Neville, P.J.,York, A.,Collett,
N.G. (2010). Planned fires and invertebrate conservation in south east Australia.
Journal of Insect Conservation. DOI 10.1007/s10841–010–9284–4.
Ninnes, C. E., Waas, J. R., Ling, N., Nakagawa, S., Banks, J., Bell, D., Bright, A.,
Carey, P. W., Chandler, J., Hudson, Q., Ingram, J., Lyall, K., Morgan, D., Stevens,
M. I., Wallace, J., Möstl, E. (2009). Comparing plasma and faecal measures of steroid
hormones in Adelie penguins Pygoscelis adeliae. Journal of Comparative Physiology
B, available online doi: 10.1007/s00360-009-0390-0
45
Ninnes, C. E., Waas, J. R., Ling, N., Nakagawa, S., Banks, J., Bell, D., Bright, A.,
Carey, P. W., Chandler, J., Hudson, Q., Ingram, J., Lyall, K., Morgan, D., Stevens,
M. I., Wallace, J., Möstl, E. (2009). Comparing plasma and faecal measures of steroid
hormones in Adelie penguins Pygoscelis adeliae. Journal of Comparative Physiology
B 180, 83-94.
Oliver, P. & Hutchinson, M. (2009). An adult microphthalmic gekkotan, Pygopus
schraderi. Herpetological Review (accepted).
Ottewell, K.M., Donnellan, S.C., Lowe, A.J., Paton, D.C. (2009). Predicting
reproductive success of insect- versus bird-pollinated scattered trees in agricultural
landscapes. Biological Conservation 142: 888-898.
Paar, W. Pring A., Moëlo, Y., Stanley, C. J. Putz, H., Topa, D. and Roberts A.C.
(2009). Daliranite, PbHgAs2S6 , a new sulphosalt from the Zarshouran Au-As deposit,
Takab region, Iran. Mineralogical Magazine 73: 871-881, 2009.
Paterson, J.R., Edgecombe G.D., García-Bellido, D.C., Jago, J.B., and Gehling, J.G.,
(2010). Nektaspid arthropods from the Lower Cambrian Emu Bay Shale Lagerstätte,
South Australia, with a reassessment of Lamellipedian relationships. Palaeontology, 53:
377-402.
Pawson, D.L., Pawson D.J. and King, R.A. (2010). A taxonomic guide to the
Echinodermata of the South Atlantic Bight, USA: 1. Sea cucumbers (Echinodermata:
Holothuroidea). Zootaxa 2449: 1-48.
Perkins, E.M., Donnellan, S.C., Bertozzi , T., Chisholm, L.A. and Whittington, I.D.
(2009). Looks can deceive: Molecular phylogeny of flatworm ectoparasites
(Monogenea: Capsalidae) does not reflect current morphological classification.
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 52: 705-714.
doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2009.05.008.
Phillips, M.J., Bennett, T., and Lee, M.S.Y. (2009). Molecules and morphology
suggest a recent, amphibious ancestry for echidnas. Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences 106: 17089-17094, doi:10.1073/pnas.0904649106
Phillips, M.J. and Lee, M.S.Y. (2010). How recently did modern monotremes
diversify? Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (advance online - doi:
10.1073/pnas.0913152107).
Potapov, Mikhail, Babenko, Anatoly, Fjellberg Arne and Greenslade, Penelope.
(2009). Taxonomy of the Proisotoma complex. II A revision of the genus Subisotoma
and a description of Isotopenola gen.nov. (Collembola: Isotomidae). Zootaxa 2314:
1–40.
Potapov, Mikhail, B., Greenslade, Penelope (2010). Redescription of Folsomia
loftyensis Womersley with notes on the sensillary arrangement of the genital segment
in the genus (Collembola: Isotomidae). Zoologisher Anzeiger
doi:10.1016/j.jcz.12010.01.004
46
Prideaux, G. J., Ayliffe, L. K., DeSantis, L. R. G., Schubert, B. W., Murray, P. F.,
Gagan, M. K., and Cerling, T. E. (2009). Extinction implications of a chenopod
browse diet for a giant Pleistocene kangaroo. Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences USA 106: 11646–11650.
Prideaux, G. J. and Warburton, N. M. (2009). Bohra nullarbora sp. nov., a second
tree-kangaroo (Marsupialia: Macropodidae) from the Pleistocene of the Nullarbor
Plain, Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum 25: 165–178.
Rabosky, D.L., Talaba, A.L., Donnellan, S.C., Lovette, I.J. (2009). Molecular
evidence for hybridization between two Australian desert skinks, Ctenotus leonhardii
and Ctenotus quattuordecimlineatus (Scincidae: Squamata). Molecular Phylogenetics
and Evolution 53: 368-377. (doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2009.06.020).
Reed, E. H. (2009) Decomposition and disarticulation of kangaroo carcasses in
caves at Naracoorte, South Australia. Journal of Taphonomy. 7(4): 265-283.
Reed, E. H. & Bourne, S. J. (2009) Pleistocene fossil vertebrate sites of the South
East region of South Australia II. Transactions of the Royal Society of South
Australia. 133(1): 30-40.
Rehan, S. M., Chapman, T. W., Craigie, A., Cooper, S. J. B. and Schwarz, M. P.
(2010). Phylogeny, historical biogeography and cladogenesis of the small carpenter
bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae: Ceratinini). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 55:
1042-1054.
Reith, F., Etschmann, B, Grose, C., Moors, H, Bentamne, MA, Monieurs, P. Grass,
G., Doonan, C., Vogt, S., Lai, G., Martinez-Criado, G., Geirge, G.N., Nies, D.H.,
Pring, A., Southam, G., and Brugger J. How bacteria form Gold: Mechanisms of
gold biomineralization in Cupriatdus metallidurns. Proceeding of the National
Academy of Science, 106: 17757-17762, 2009. dio/10.1073/pnas.0904583106
Richards, S.J., Hoskin, C., Cunningham, M., McDonald, K., Donnellan, S.C.
(2010). Taxonomic assessment of the Australian and New Guinean populations of
the green-eyed treefrogs Litoria eucnemis and Litoria genimaculata. Zootaxa 2391:
33-46.
Rosauer, D., Laffan, S.W., Crisp, M.D., Donnellan, S.C., Cook, L.G. (2009).
Phylogenetic endemism: a new approach for identifying geographical concentrations
of evolutionary history. Molecular Ecology 18: 4061-4072. (doi: 10.1111/j.1365-
294X.2009.04311.x).
Sanders, K.L., Lee, M.S.Y.. (2010). Molecular divergence times and the affinities of
pentastomids and branchiurans within arthropods. Systematics and Biodiversity 8:
63-74.
47
Searle, J.B., Jamieson, P.M., Gündüz, I., Stevens, M.I., Jones, E.P., Gemmill, C.E.C.,
King, C.M. (2009) The diverse origins of New Zealand house mice. Proceedings of
the Royal Society B 276: 209-217, equal contributions.
Shaughnessy, P. D. and Briggs, S. V. (2009). Tourists and Little Penguins Eudyptula
minor at Montague Island, New South Wales. Corella 33: 25-29.
Shaughnessy, P. D., Dennis, T.E., Dowie D., McKenzie, J. and McIntosh, R. R.
(2009). Status of small colonies of the Australian sea lion Neophoca cinerea on
Kangaroo Island, South Australia. Australian Zoologist 35: 82-89.
Shepherd, S.A., Brook, J.B. and Xiao, Y. (2010) Environmental and fishing effects
on the abundance, size and sex ratio of the blue-throated wrasse, Notolabrus tetricus,
on South Australian coastal reefs. Fisheries Management & Ecology 17: 209–220.
Shepherd, S.A., Watson, J.E. Womersley, H.B.S. and Carey, J. (2009) Long-term
changes in macroalgal assemblages after increased sedimentation and turbidity in
Western Port, Victoria, Australia. Botanica Marina 52: 195-206.
Sistrom, M. J., Hutchinson, M. N., Donnellan, S. C. And Hutchinson, R. G. (2009)
Taxonomic review of the genus Gehyra (Squamata: Gekkonidae) in South Australia.
Zootaxa 2277: 14–32.
Sistrom, M.J., Hutchinson, M.N., Hutchinson, R.G., Donnellan, S.C. (2009).
Molecular phylogeny of Australian Gehyra (Squamata: Gekkonidae) and taxonomic
revision of Gehyra variegata in south-eastern Australia. Zootaxa 2277: 14–32.
Skinner, A., Lee, M.S.Y. (2009). Body form evolution in the scincid lizard clade
Lerista and the mode of macroevolutionary transitions. Evolutionary Biology 36:
292-300 (doi:10.1007/s11692-009-9064-9)
Skinner, A., Lee, M.S.Y. (2010). Inconsistent ancestors and character state
reconstructions. Biology Letters 6:354-358 [advance online: doi
10.1098/rsbl.2009.0840]
Skuballa, J., Taraschewski, H., Petney, T. N., Pfaffle, M. and Smales L. R. (2009).
The avian acanthocephalan Plagiorhynchus cylindraceus (Palaeacanthocephala)
parasitizing the European hedgehog (Erinaceus europaeus) in Europe and New
Zealand. Parasitology Research DOI 10.1007/s00436-009-1681-9
Smales, L. R. (2009)a Edmondsacanthus blairi n.gen., n. sp. (Acanthocephala:
Rhadinorhynchidae) parasitic in the intestine of the eastern rainbow fish
Melanotaenia
splendida (Peters, 1866). Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia 133:
284-287.
Smales, L. R. (2009)b Helminth biodiversity in the genus Melomys (Murinae:
Hydromyini) from Australia and New Guinea. Transactions of the Royal Society of
South Australia 133: 265-273.
48
Smales, L.R. (2010)a. The gastrointestinal helminths of Lorentzimys nouhuysi
(Rodentia: Muridae) with descriptions of two new genera and three new species
(Nematoda) from Papua New Guinea. Journal of Parasitology.
Smales L.R. (2010) b. Plagiorhynchidae (Acanthocephala) including the description
of a new species from birds from the Republic of the Cote D‟Ivoire. Review Suisse de
Zoologie 117: 153-158.
Smales L.R. (2010) c. A new species of Porrorchis (Acanthocephala:
Plagiorhynchidae) from Myoictis wallacii (Marsupialia: Dasyuridae) from Aru
Islands, Indonesia. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia 134.
Stevens, M.I., Hicks, B.J. (2009) Mitochondrial DNA reveals monophyly of New
Zealand‟s Gobiomorphus (Teleostei: Eleotridae) among a morphological complex.
Evolutionary Ecology Research 11, 109-123.
Stevens, M.I., Gordon, S. (2009) The Latitudinal Gradient Project (LGP) – a first for
Antarctic multidisciplinary research. Antarctic 27: 70-71.
St Pierre, E., Zhao, J. and Reed, E. H. (2009) Expanding the utility of Uranium-
series dating of speleothems for archaeological and palaeontological applications.
Journal of Archaeological Science. 36 (7): 1416-1423.
Stamation, K. A., Croft, D. B., Shaughnessy, P. D., Waples, K. A. and Briggs, S. V.
(2010). Behavioral responses of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) to
whale-watching vessels on the southeastern coast of Australia. Marine Mammal
Science 26: 98-122.
Sung, Y-Y., Cook, C.L., Pring, A, Brugger, J, Skinner, W, Nugus, M. Invisible gold
in arsenian pyrite and arsenopyrite from the Sunrise Dam gold deposit, Eastern
Goldfields Province, Western Australia. Mineralium Deposita 44: 765-791, 2009.
Sutton, Peter. (2009). Australian anthropologists and political action 1925-1960.
Oceania 79: 202-217.
Sutton, Peter. (2009). Radical hope: correspondence. Quarterly Essay 36:112-115.
Sutton, Peter (2010). Aboriginal spirituality in a new age. In Carolyn Schwarz and
Françoise Dussart (eds), Engaging Christianity in Aboriginal Australia. Special issue
of The Australian Journal of Anthropology 21:71-89.
Sutton, Peter (2010). Ursula McConnel‟s tin trunk: A remarkable recovery.
Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia 134:101-114.
Tappert, R, Foden J and Pring A. (2009). The Mineralogy of the Yaringie Hill
meteorite – a new H5 chondrite from South Australia. Meteoritics and Planetary
Sciences. 44: 1687-1693.
49
Testemale, D., Brugger, J., Liu, W., Etschmann, B., Hazemann, J.-L. (2009). An
XAS study of the chloride complexing of Fe(II) in brines to supercritical conditions.
Chemical Geology, 264: 295–310. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2009.03.014.
Theiss S.M., Kyne P.M. & Chisholm L.A. (2010). Distribution of the porcupine ray
Urogymnus asperrimus (Bloch & Schneider, 1801) in Australian waters, with new
records from Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum: Nature 55: 101-105.
Timms, Brian V and Hudson, Peter. (2009). The brine shrimps (Artemia and
Parartemia) of South Australia, including descriptions of four new species of
Parartemia (Crustacea: Anostraca: Artemiina). Zootaxa 2248: 47-68.
Tyler, M.J., (2009) Frogs and Toads as Experimental Animals. ANZCCART Fact
Sheet A13. Revised Edition.
Vaughan D.B. & Chisholm L.A. (2009). Three Dendromonocotyle species
(Monogenea: Monocotylidae) reported from captive rays, including D. lotteri sp. n.
from Himantura gerrardi (Elasmobranchii: Dasyatidae) in the public aquarium at the
Atlantis resort, Dubai. Folia Parasitologica 56: 99-106.
Vaughan D.B. & Chisholm L.A. (2010). Heterocotyle tokoloshei sp. nov.
(Monogenea: Monocotylidae) from the gills of Dasyatis brevicaudata (Dasyatidae)
kept in captivity at Two Oceans Aquarium, Cape Town, South Africa: description and
notes on treatment. Acta Parasitologica 106: 431–437.
Watts, C.H.S. (2010). Revision of the genus Macrohelodes (Scirtidae: Coleoptera;
Insecta). Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia 134: 19-52.
Watts, C.H.S. (2010). Revision of Australian Prionocyphon Redtenbacher
(Scirtidae: Coleoptera). Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia 134: 53-
86.
Watts C.H.S. and J. McRae (2010). The identity of Haliplus (Coleoptera: Haliplidae)
from the Pilbara region of Australia, including the description of four new species.
Records of the Western Australian Museum 25: 387-398.
Weaver, H.J. and Smales, L.R. (2009). The parasite assemblages of Zyzomys argurus
(Thomas, 1889) (Muridae: Murinae) from northern Australia. Australian Journal of
Zoology 57: 429-432.
Whittington I.D. (2010). Revision of Benedeniella Johnston, 1929 (Monogenea:
Capsalidae), its assignment to Entobdellinae Bychowsky, 1957 and comments on
subfamilial composition. Zootaxa 2519: 1-30.
Xia, F. O‟Neill, B, Ngothai, Y., Peak, J., Tenailleau, C., Etschmann, B, Qian, G.,
Brugger, J., Struder, A., Olsen, S., and Pring, A. (2010). A thermosyphon driven
hydrothermal flow-through cell fro in situ and time- resolved neutron diffraction
studies. Journal of Applied Crystallography, 43: 511-519.
50
Xia F., Brugger, J., Ngothai, Y., O‟Neill, B, Chen, G., and., Pring, A., (2009).
Three dimensional ordered arrays of nanozeolites with uniform size and orientation by
a pseudomorphic coupled dissolution-reprecipitation replacement route. Crystal
Growth and Design, 9: 4902-4906. DOI: 10.1021/cg900691a.
Ye, Q., Hammer, M.P.(2009). Fishes. In: J.T. Jennings (Ed) Natural History of the
Riverland and Murray Lands, Royal Society of South Australia Inc., Adelaide, pp
334-352.
Yves Alarie, Mariano C., Michat, C. and Watts, CH.S. (2009). Larval morphology of
Paroster Sharp, 1882 (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae: Hydroporinae): reinforcement of the
hypothesis of monophyletic origin and discussion of phenotypic accommodation to a
hypogaeic environment. Zootaxa 2274: 1-44.
Zhang Feng, Deharveng, L., Greenslade, Penelope and Chen, Jian-Xiu. (2009).
Revision of the the genus Acanthocyrtus (Collembola: Entomobryidae) and a
description of a new genus from Eastern Asia. Zoological Journal of the Linnean
Society. 157: 495–514.
Zeidler, W., and DeBroyer, C. (2009). Catalogue of the Hyperiidean Amphipoda
(Crustacea) of the Southern Ocean with distribution and ecological data. In:
DeBroyer, C.(Ed.), Census of Antarctic Marine Life: Synopsis of the Amphipoda of
the Southern Ocean, Volume 3. Bulletin de L’Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles
de Belgique,Biologie 79, suppl. 1: 1-96, 4 plates.
Zhao, J., Brugger, J., Grundler, P., Xia, F., Chen., G., and Pring, A. (2009).
Mechanism and Kinetics of a mineral transformation under hydrothermal conditions:
calaverite to metallic gold. American Mineralogist, 94: 1541-1555.
51
3.4 Other publications (book reviews, conference proceedings, contributed
papers etc.)
Boll V.M. (2009). Informed consent form. In Janke, T., Holcombe, S. and M. Davies.
Indigenous Ecological Knowledge and Natural Resources in the Northern Territory.
Report on the Current Status of Indigenous Intellectual Property. A report
commissioned by the Natural Resources Management Board (NT) Component 3 (of
3). Terri Janke and Company Pty Ltd: 185-187.
Bolton J. and A. Fyfe. (2010). String bag patterns and colour dyes of the upper Sepik
basin and Border Mountains. Added to USCNGP website under „Papers‟.
Bradford, T.,Guzik,M.,Humphreys,W.F.,Austin A.D. & Cooper, S.J.B. (2009)
Modes of speciation in stygofauna from a single calcrete aquifer. The Combined
Australian Entomological Society‟s 40th AGM & Scientific Conference, Society of
Australian Systematic Biologists and 9th
Australian Biodiversity and Conservation
conference, Darwin, Australia, September, 2009.
Byrne, M., Yeates, D.K., L. Joseph, L., M. Kearney, M., J. Bowler, J., M.A.
Williams, M.A., Cooper, S.J.B., Donnellan, S.C., Keogh, S., Leijs, R., J. Melville,
D. Murphy, N Porch, K.-H. Wyrwoll (2009) Evolution in the Australian arid zone.
The Combined Australian Entomological Society‟s 40th AGM & Scientific
Conference, Society of Australian Systematic Biologists and 9th
Australian
Biodiversity and Conservation conference, Darwin, Australia, September, 2009.
Catalano S., Hutson K.S. & Whittington I.D. (2009). Picky parasites: patterns of
infection in three important endemic fishes (Arripis spp.). The Annual Scientific
Meeting of the Australian Society for Parasitology Inc. and the ARC/NHMRC
Research Network for Parasitology Annual Conference, The University of Sydney,
Sydney, NSW, Australia. (Abstract with program; P28), 12-15 July 2009.
Cooper, S.J.B. 2 x 45 min talks to school students at the SA Museum as part of
Science Week, August, 2009.
Cooper, S.J.B., Humphreys, W.F. & Harvey, M.S. (2009) A new troglofauna from
the calcrete islands of central Western Australia. The Combined Australian
Entomological Society‟s 40th AGM & Scientific Conference, Society of Australian
Systematic Biologists and 9th
Australian Biodiversity and Conservation conference, ,
Darwin, Australia, September, 2009.
Cooper, S.J.B. Talk to Australian Centre for Evolutionary Biology and Biodiversity
group during mini-symposium, December, 2009.
Cooper, S.J.B. Lecture to Cindy Bottema‟s Animal Science class and tour of Science
Centre, February, 2010.
Cooper, S.J.B. Opening of new biodiversity gallery: talks with public
52
Cooper, S.J.B. Organisation and presentation of a one day workshop in Perth on
subterranean fauna to Environmental consultancies, mining companies and
government representatives, WA Museum, Perth.
Cooper, S.J.B. Organisation and presentation of talks and practical demonstrations
for a four day workshop on population genetics and phylogeography to national Ph.D
students
Cooper, S.J.B. Participation in SA Museum roadshow to APY-lands, northern SA,
presentation of ~20 talks/presentations to school kids, May 2010.
Craig, B. (2009). Can we rely on Sotheby‟s? Oceanic Art Society Newsletter 14 (4):
4-6.
Craig, B. (2009). Scanned, documented and uploaded 235 field photographs to
„Gallery/Photosets‟ of the Upper Sepik-Central New Guinea Project website
(www.uscngp.com).
Craig, B (2009). Revised text, 50 field photographs, 13 Figures, and 54 drawings for
„Introduction….‟ and for „Legends of the Amto of Simaiya Valley, West Sepik
Province, PNG‟ and „Legends of the Abau of Idam Valley, West Sepik Province,
PNG‟. Added to USCNGP website under „Papers‟.
Craig, B (2010). Edited and annotated translations from German of Richard
Thurnwald‟s 1914 and 1916 reports of his explorations in the upper Sepik and central
New Guinea – Added to USCNGP website under „Papers‟.
Craig, B. (2010). Tally Systems of the Upper Sepik and Central New Guinea. Added
to USCNGP website under „Papers‟.
Demetras, N.J., Hogg,I.D., Stevens, M.I.,Ross,P.M., Banks, J.C. (2009) Distribution
of mtDNA haplotypes for the springtail Gomphiochephalus hodgsoni relative to
physical, chemical and biological characteristics in the southern Dry Valleys, Victoria
Land. Xth SCAR Biology Symposium, Sapporo, Japan, 2009.
Deveney M.R., Williams R.E. & Whittington I.D. (2009). Treating monogeneans in aquaculture: how do I treat you? Let me count the ways. The 6
th International Symposium on Monogenea, Cape Town, South Africa.
(Abstract with program; invited presentation I3), 2-7 august, 2009.
Domingues M.V., Whittington I.D. and Chisholm L.A. (2009). Phylogeny and
coevolution of the Hexabothriidae Price, 1942: A new hypothesis twenty years after
the Boeger & Kritsky proposal. International Symposium on Monogenea (ISM6),
Cape Town, South Africa, August 2009.
Domingues M.V., Whittington I.D. and Chisholm L.A. (2009). The Hexabothriidae
database: a time for integration. International Symposium on Monogenea (ISM6),
Cape Town, South Africa, August, 2009.
53
Domingues M.V., Chisholm L.A. and Whittington I.D. (2009). New species of
Hexabothriidae Price, 1942 from Australia, Indonesia, Malaysia and New Zealand
with a proposal of a new genus. International Symposium on Monogenea (ISM6),
Cape Town, South Africa, August, 2009.
Domingues M.V., Whittington I.D. and Chisholm L.A. (2009). Phylogeny and
coevolution of the Hexabothriidae Price, 1942: A new hypothesis twenty years after
the Boeger & Kritsky proposal. International Symposium on Monogenea (ISM6),
Cape Town, South Africa, August, 2009.
Gara, T. „They died like flies‟ - Spanish Influenza and its impact on Aboriginal
people in South Australia, 1919. Australian and New Zealand Society of the History
of Medicine Conference, Perth, September 2010.
Gara, T. Ivaritji and her relatives. Kaurna people on Yorke Peninsula. SA State
History Conference, Adelaide, 2nd August 2009.
Gehling, J.G. “Tracks through Time” Public talk for Palaeontology Week in
Kingston, Kangaroo Island, 25 March 2010.
Gehling, J.G. Invited paper entitled: The role of microbial mats and organic matter in
early diagenesis of Ediacaran siliciclastic sediment. SEPM Field Conference:
“Microbial mats in siliciclastic sediments (Archean to Recent)”; Denver Colorado, 21-
24 May, 2010.
Gehling. J.G. Address at International Commission on Stratigraphy meeting, Prague:
Neoproterozoic Subcommission: Exploring an Ediacaran Subdivision, 31 May – 3
June 2010.
Gemmil,l C.E.C., Stevens, M.I., Clarke, A.C., Clarkson, F.M. Are current restoration
practices capturing levels of genetic diversity observed in the wild? URBAN
RESTORATION WORKSHOP, University of Waikato (oral presentation), 7-9 July
2009.
Goldsworthy, S. D., Page, B., Shaughnessy, P. D., Hamer, D., Peters, K. D.,
McIntosh, R. R., Baylis, A. M. M. and McKenzie, J. (2009). Innovative solutions for
aquaculture planning and management: addressing seal interactions in the finfish
aquaculture industry. FRDC Project number: 2004/201. SARDI Aquatic Sciences
Publication Number F2008/000222-1. SARDI Research Report Series No. 288. 291
pp
Goldsworthy, S. D., Page, B., Shaughnessy, P. D. and Linnane, A. (2010). Mitigating
seal interactions in the SRLF and the Gillnet sector SESSF in South Australia. SARDI
Aquatic Sciences Publication No. F2009/000613-1. SARDI Research Report Series
No. 405. 215 pp.
54
Green,T.G.A., Cary, S.C., Hogg, I.D., Stevens, M.I., et al. Predicting Biocomplexity
in Dry Valley Ecosystems (TABS): An IPY Project. Annual Antarctic Conference
2009, University of Auckland (oral presentation), 1-3 July 2009.
Guzik,M.T., M. Adams, N.P. Murphy, S.J.B. Cooper & A.D. Austin (2009) Great
Artesian Basin mound springs reveal cryptic species in the ancient isopod
Phreatomerus latipes. The Combined Australian Entomological Society‟s 40th
AGM
& Scientific Conference, Society of Australian Systematic Biologists and 9th
Australian Biodiversity and Conservation conference, Darwin, Australia, September,
2009.
Hogg, I.D., Stevens, M.I., et al. Antarctic Springtails. Annual Antarctic Conference
2009, University of Auckland (poster presentation), 1-3 July 2009.
Humphreys W, Page T, Stevens M.I., Foster R (2009) Scales of movement in
anchialine systems: progress in the eastern Indian Ocean. AnchialineE cosystemsR:
eflectiona nd Prospects Palma de Mallorca, Spain, November 2009.
Hutson K.S. & Whittington I.D. (2009). Where the wild things are: predicting which parasites from wild fish may be problematic in sea-cage aquaculture. FRDC Aquatic Animal Health National Aquatic Animal Health Subprogram Scientific Conference, Rydges Esplanade Resort, Cairns, Queensland, Australia. (Abstract with program), 22-24 July 2009.
Hutson, K.S., Catalano, S.R. & Whittington, I.D. (2010). Attract, aggregate and
accumulate: wild fishes as potential parasite reservoirs for sea-caged stocks.
Australasian Aquaculture, Hobart, 25 May 2010.
Kawakami, T., R. K. Butlin, M. Adams, K.M. Saint & S.J.B. Cooper (2009)
Genetic analysis of a chromosomal hybrid zone in the Australian morabine
grasshoppers (Vandiemenella viatica species group). (poster presentation), European
Society for Evolutionary Biology Conference, Turin, Italy, August, 2009.
Kawakami,T., R. K. Butlin, M. Adams, K.M. Saint and S.J.B. Cooper (2009)
Genetic analysis of a chromosomal hybrid zone in the Australian morabine
grasshoppers (Vandiemenella viatica species group). (poster presentation), The
Combined Australian Entomological Society‟s 40th
AGM & Scientific Conference,
Society of Australian Systematic Biologists and 9th
Australian Biodiversity and
Conservation conference, Darwin, Australia, September, 2009.
King, R.A. and Murphy, N.P.25-28 September 2009: Phenotypic similarities and
differentiation among mound spring amphipods. Combined Australian Entomological
Society‟s 40th AGM & Scientific Conference, Society of Australian Systematic
Biologists, 9th Invertebrate Biodiversity & Conservation Conference. Darwin,
Northern Territory, Australia (oral presentation).
55
Lancaster,M., Cooper,S., Carthew, S. & Taylor, A. (2009) Genetic structure and
diversity of the Common ringtail possum in a fragmented Australian landscape. (oral
and poster presentation), The 10th International Congress of Ecology, Brisbane,
Australia, August, 2009.
Lavigne, R.(2010). Reviews of papers for Scientific Journals, Journal of the
Entomological Research Society (2), American Midland Naturalist (1), Zootaxa (1)
McGaughran, A., Convey, P., Stevens, M.I., Chown, S.L. Metabolic rate, genetic and
microclimate variation among springtail populations from sub-Antarctic Marion
Island. Xth SCAR Biology Symposium, Sapporo, Japan, 2009.
Minardi D., Whittington I.D., Kearn G., Paladini G., Shinn A.P., Fioravanti M.L. & Bron J.E. (2009). Preliminary observations on the reproductive system of Neoentobdella diadema (Monticelli, 1902) Kearn & Whittington, 2005 (Monogenea: Capsalidae). The 6
th International Symposium on
Monogenea, Cape Town, South Africa. (Abstract with program; presentation C14), 2-7 August, 2009. Mooney A.J., Lackenby J.A. and Whittington I.D. (2009). Tales about Monogenea in kingfish (Seriola lalandi) culture from South Australia. The 6
th
International Symposium on Monogenea, Cape Town, South Africa. (Abstract with program; presentation C24), 2-7 August, 2009.
Porco, D., Deharveng, L., Decaens, T., Stevens, M.I., James, S., Van Vuuren, B.,
Butt, K., Rougerie, R., Hebert, P.,BARCODING INVASIVES: A NEW TOOL FOR
INVASION MONITORING IN SOIL. Third International Barcode of Life
Conference, Mexico City (oral presentation), 7-13 November, 2009.
Perkins L.M., Bertozzi T., Donnellan S.C. & Whittington I.D. (2009). An unfaithful family: comparison of capsalid (Monopisthocotylea) and host phylogenies reveals extensive independent radiation. The 6
th International symposium on
Monogenea, Cape Town, South Africa. (Abstract with program; presentation C9), 2-7 August, 2009.
Shaughnessy, P. D. (2010). Abundance of New Zealand fur seal pups on Kangaroo
Island in 2009-10 and of Australian sea lion pups at The Pages Islands in 2009.
Report to Department for Environment and Heritage, South Australia. 35 pp.
Shinn A., Paladini G., Whittington I.D., Harris P., Littlewood T., Bakke T.,HarrisJ., Christison K., Rubio-Godoy M., Conway D. & Bron J. (2009). MonoDB: first steps in the provision of a centralised web-based resource for the Monogenea. The 6
th International Symposium on Monogenea, Cape
Town, South Africa. (Abstract with program; invited presentation I5), 2-7 August, 2009. Shinn A., Whittington I.D., Christison K.W. & Bron J.E. (2009). Man, monsters and machines: managing malicious monogenean miscreants. The 6
th
International Symposium on Monogenea, Cape Town, South Africa. (Abstract with program; presentation C25), 2-7 August, 2009.
56
Stevens, M.I, Greenslade, P., Porco, D., Deharveng, L. Barcoding Australasian
Collembola. The Combined Australian Entomological Society‟s 40th AGM &
Scientific Conference, Society of Australian Systematic Biologists, 9th Invertebrate
Biodiversity & Conservation Conference, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia (oral
presentation), 25-28 September, 2010.
Stevens, M.I. Biological signatures in Antarctica: A window into the past, to predict
the future. Celebrating the International Polar Year: looking to the past to see the
future. Public lecture supported by the Australian Academy of Science and
International Polar Year. Royal Institution of Australia, Exchange Place, Adelaide
5000, 5 November, 2009.
Stevens, M,I. (2009) Biological signatures in Antarctica: A window into the past, to
predict the future. RIA invited public lecture, Royal Institution of Australia, Exchange
Place, Adelaide, 5 November, 2009.
Sutton, Peter (2009). Melbourne‟s outback. Dialogue 28 (2):74-77.
Sutton, Peter (2010). Lord Somers Camp 1932. The Journal. Lord Somers Camp and
Power House 60(1):8-9 & 28.
Vaughan D. & Chisholm L.A. (2009). Dendromonocotyle in public aquaria.
International Symposium on Monogenea (ISM6), Cape Town, South Africa, August,
2009.
Whittington I.D. & Perkins L.M. (2009). Molecular data corrupts „conventional‟
capsalid classification: inconceivable or credible and expected? The 6th International
Symposium on Monogenea, Cape Town, South Africa. (Abstract with program;
presentation C10), 2-7 August, 2009.
Whittington I.D. (2009). Dynamic nomenclature demands different procedures. The
6th
International Symposium on Monogenea, Cape Town, South Africa. (Abstract
with program; presentation C35). 2-7 August, 2009.
Williams R.E., Ernst I., Chambers C.B., Whittington I.D. & Deveney M.R. (2009).
Treatments for monogeneans of yellowtail (Seriola spp.): status and the future. The
14th European Association of Fish Pathology International Conference, Prague, Czech
Republic. (Abstract with program)., 14-19 September, 2009.
Xia, F., Brugger, J., Ngothai, Y, O’Neill, B., Chen, G. and Pring, A. (2009) Three
Dimensional Ordered Arrays of Nanozeolites with Uniform Size and Orientation by a
Pseudomorphic Coupled Dissolution-Reprecipitation Replacement Route. 8th
World
Congress of Chemical Engineering, Montréal, Canada, August, 2009.
Xia, F., Brugger, J. and Pring, A. (2009) Arsenian Pyrite Formation: Solid-State
Diffusion or Dissolution-Reprecipitation Replacement ? Proceedings of the 10th
Biennial SGA Meeting of The Society for Geology Applied to Mineral Deposits,
Townsville, Australia. P. 700-702, August, 2009.
57
3.5 Staff contributions to State, National & International Initiatives
VALERIE BOLL:
August 2009: Caring for Country – Managing Indigenous and Scientific
Environmental Knowledge in North East Arnhem Land, Australia (poster
presentation). SERI (Society for Ecological Restoration International) World
Conference, Perth, Western Australia.
28 April 2010: Caring for Country – Managing Indigenous and Scientific
Environmental Knowledge in North East Arnhem Land, Australia. Presentation of the
outcomes of the project to Dhimurru Aboriginal Corporation and their board.Yirrkala,
Northern Territory.
JAN FORREST:
BUTTERFLY TALKS:
17 July 2009: Camelia Society, 20 people
28 July 2009: Iris Soc. Goodwood, 20 people
27 August 2009: Stirling Hills Garden Club, 15 people
1 September 2009: Kingston Park Probus club, 25 people
19 October 2009: Landcare group Callington, 20 people
21 October 2009: Longwood community group, 20 people
15 April 2010: Stirling Garden Club, 50 people
7 June 2010: Probus Holdfast Bay, 30 people
16 June 2010: ladies group, 10 people
21 June 2010: Mt.Barker Garden Club, 10 people
TOM GARA
10 November 2009: Gara, T. & Paul, M. „On the pipe-track and in the town:
Indigenous workers and Eyre Peninsula fringe camps‟. Indigenous Participation in the
Australian Economy Conference, National Museum of Australia, Canberra.
31 October 2009: Gara, T. The land of the Kaurna: Indigenous occupation of the
Adelaide Plains prior to 1836. 25th Annual Friends of Parks Forum, Sunnybrae Farm.
PENELOPE GREENSLADE:
January 2010: Why use invertebrates to monitor catchment restoration success in
western Victoria? CMA meeting, Coolac.
February, 2010: Life in your soil. Gunning Land Care Group.
February 2010: The importance of taxonomy in quarantine. Global Biosecurity
Conference, Brisbane.
May 2010: Invasive Species. La Trobe University, Bendigo Campus.
58
MARK HUTCHINSON:
August 2009: SCIENCE ALIVE event, Wayville Showgrounds. Science on the
Couch.
September 2009: UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA – Workshop
contribution for MSc course on urban ecology and conservation, Reptiles of the
Adelaide region.
October 2009: 7:30 REPORT story – Brown Snakes (Mike Sexton), interview filmed
October 2009.
January 2010: Biodiversity Gallery information session for Primary School teachers,
March 2010: Toxinology Short Course for emergency medicine physicians,
Womens‟ and Childrens‟ Hospital, Lecture on venomous snake origins and evolution;
practical class on snake identification.
March 2010: Urrbrae TAFE, Practical class visit to SAM collections and talk on
museum resources available for biodiversity studies.
May 2010: Biodiversity Gallery presentation, Australian Science Communicators.
May 2010: APY Lands Roadshow. Presenter.
June 2010: News report: „LONGREACH LEADER‟ (Qld), “Reptile Research Team
Treks Out West”.
THIERRY LAPEROUSAZ
26-27 November 2009: South East road show talk: Deep sea research and “Show and
tell” of deep sea specimens from SA Museum collections.
18- 19 August 2009: National Science Week presentation: Deep sea research and
“Show and tell” of deep sea specimens from SA Museum collections.
CHRIS MADDEN:
February 2009: Aquatic Macroinvertebrates Taxonomic Workshop. Presented
Identification Key to Genera of Australian Chironomidae Larvae
Field Naturalists Society of South Australia Meeting June 10, 2009. Presented talk
“Macroinvertebrates in streams of Fleurieu Peninsula parks.”
59
GRAHAM MEDLIN:
4 November 2009: „Trees for Life‟ group at Willunga. Graham Medlin gave a
PowerPoint presentation showing how Stick-nest Rat middens can be used to trace
climatic change in the Flinders Ranges over the past 10,000 years.
11 November 2009: Field Naturalists Society of South Australia meeting. Graham
Medlin gave a PowerPoint presentation on the formations found in Warraweena Cave
in Warraweena Conservation Park in the northern Flinders Ranges.
12 May 2010: Field Naturalists Society of South Australia meeting. Graham Medlin
and Peter Matejcic spoke on Mammals and reptiles found during a biodiversity survey
of Billiatt Wilderness Protection Area.
SUZANNE MILLER:
24-26/7/09 Palaeoweek school workshops: Dinosaur Crime Scene
14/7/09 Presentation at Adelaide Hills Resource Centre: A Museum Most Marvelous
1/7/09 Launch of Tartan Week: Presentation
23/7/09 Guest Speaker Fullarton Probis Club A Museum Most Marvelous
25/7/09 Guest speaker, Order of Australia Dinner
27/8/09 Adult Learners Week Award Dinner speech
10/7/09 – 12/7/09 Contributor three sessions of the Adelaide Festival of ideas
2/9/09 Guest Speaker, UniSA: Science Communication & the role of museums
3/7/09 TAFE SA David Unaipon Celebration Guest speaker
9/10/09 Speaker at Science in the Square What you believe but can't prove, RiAus
21/10/09 Chaired the Premiers Climate Change Council Emergency Management
Symposium
26/10/09 Guest presenter, Barbara Hardy Dinner, University of Adelaide
28/10/09 Guest lecturer, University of the 3rd
Age, Aldinga: Museums in the 22nd
Century
14/11/09 Guest speaker University of Cambridge Society annual dinner: A Museum
Most Marvelous
2/3/10 Chaired a session of the Adelaide Writers Week
4/3/10 Lecture to the Field Geology Club: Geoarchaeology: unearthing ancient
cultures from the Romans to Picts
18/3/10 Guest Speaker, Medical Heritage Society: Medical collections
24/3/10 MC For Schools Palaeoweek forum
6/4/10 Guest Speaker, Spirituality in the Pub
8/4/10 Guest Speaker, TRIN dinner
14/4/10 Guest Speaker, Quality in Postgraduate Teaching Conference 2010
28/5/10 Director‟s Tour for History Week: Hidden Treasures
Representative of the Australian Government on the OECD Global Science Forum
SciColl Initiative
Chair of the Organising Panel for the 2010 Global Science Forum SciColl Workshop
Member of the National Research Infrastructure Council
Member of the Australian e-Research Infrastructure Council
Member of the National Cultural Heritage Committee
60
Deputy Chair of the Atlas of Living Australia Management Committee
Member of the Council of Australasian Museum Directors
Deputy Chair of the Premier‟s Climate Change Council, SA
Member of the South Australian Strategic Plan Audit Committee
Member of the Advisory Board to the Australian Centre for Evolutionary Biology,
University of Adelaide
Member of the Advisory Board to the Geospatial and Environmental Management
Discipline, UniSA
CHRIS NOBBS:
Attended the Museums Australia Education network conference in Melbourne 15-17
September.
Both Simon Langsford and Chris Nobbs attended the Museums Australia Education
network in Canberra to formulate a response to the proposed new national curriculum
for science and history. They also presented a workshop at the Interpreting Australia
conference in Adelaide.
LESLEY SMALES:
October 2009: Two acanthocephalan stories from: a fish in South America; a
marsupial in Australia. &th International Workshop on the Acanthocephala Darling
Marine Center, University of Maine, USA.
GEORGE SMITH:
11 August 2009: “Dr William Delano Walker‟s personalized Christmas Cards”. A
power point presentation on for the Australian Society of Archivists Inc, SA Branch
AGM, held in the Ira Redmont Rooms, The University of Adelaide.
24 May 2010: Anthropological Observations in Central and Northern Australia, an
adaptation of a 1933 illustrated lecture by Dr WD Walker. History Week lecture.
DAVID STEMMER
11 May 2010: Bolivar Maceration Facility tour and workshop for students of Wildlife
Ecology Class from University of South Australia, included a comprehensive tour
through collection shed and main building followed by a workshop involving students
in the preparation of museum specimens.
61
PETER SUTTON:
13 July 2009: Gave opening plenary address to International Pragmatics Association
conference, University of Melbourne. Title: Giving away language.
28-30 August 2009: Was panellist in two sessions of Exploring the ‘New Normal’,
the 2009 Australian Leadership Retreat (Australian Davos Connection) at Hayman
Island.
8 October 2009: Gave invited seminar titled „Being under Doctor‟, at the
Australasian Faculty of Public health Medicine (Royal Australian College of
Physicians), Shenton Park (Perth), WA.
03 February 2010: Conducted all-day workshop for anthropology staff, Central Land
Council, Alice Springs.
01 March 2010: Gave invited seminar on linguistic salvage field methods,
Department of Linguistics, Boğaziçi University, Istanbul, Turkey.
08 March 2010: Took part in joint all-day seminar on Cape York Peninsula
languages, Department of Linguistics, School of Oriental & African Studies, London,.
18 March 2010: Gave invited seminar, Department of Anthropology, University of
Auckland, titled „The reception of unsettling views‟.
19 March 2010: Gave invited public lecture, University of Auckland, titled „Some
recent issues in Australian ethnic affairs‟.
KERYN WALSHE:
September 2009: Adelaide Gaol; the archaeology. Presentation to FOSSAM.
October 2009: Adelaide Gaol; history and archaeology. Presentation to History
Society, SA.
October 2009: Walshe, K., Bourne, S., Reid, L., Prideaux, G., Arman, S. Koonalda
Cave, Wall Markings. Poster presented at AURA Inter-Symposium.
November 2009: R. Candy and K. Walshe presented „Osteology‟ as an intensive
Masters Topic, Flinders University.
April 2010: Lecture, Past Environments, to Introduction to World Archaeology
series, Flinders University.
62
FRAN ZILIO:
15 September 2009: ALIA Tour (Librarians), group/work shop and talk: family
history.
16 November 2009: Northern Land Council visit, talk: family history.
25 November 2009: WA Community visit (Monty Hale Pilgangoora Community),
workshop/talk: family history and archives.
24 February 2010: Roebourne Community visit, workshop/talk: family history and
archives.
27 April 2010: Heather Brown University SA, Archival Management.
5 May 2010: Melissa Neumann O'Halloran Hill TAFE SA, archives talk and
presentation of collections.
5 May 2010: Indigenous Youth Program, talk and tour: family history and archives.
24 May 2010: History Week, talk and behind the scenes tour.
24 May 2010: History Week, talk on Dr Walker by George Smith.
26 May 2010: Indigenous Knowledge Centre, consultation.
26 May 2010: Lama Lama Community visit, workshop/talk: family history and
archives.
3 June 2010: Taunodi College visit, family history workshop, talk and tour.
15 June 2010: Berndt Museum visit, archive talk and tour.
19 May 2010: The Australian Society of Archivists on the history of access.
63
4. STAFF LIST
1 July 2009 to 30 June 2010
DIRECTOR
S. Miller, BSc (Hons), PhD, FGS, F
Min Soc, FAIMM, FAGS
HEAD OF DEVELOPMENT
S. Riley, BA (Hons)
(retired March 2010)
HEAD, CORPORATE OPERATIONS
S.Clark, BSc. (Hons Psy), BSoc. Ad.,
M. Pol. Man (started April 2010)
BUSINESS MANAGER
P. Kidd, Adv Dip Bus Management
ADMINISTRATION OFFICER
N. Mladenovic
IT NETWORK & SYSTEMS
MANAGER
P. Carter
HELPDESK OFFICER
R. Hames (left August 2009)
T. Cheng, As. Dip. Bus (Computer
Programming) (started October 2009)
OHS&W COORDINATOR
B. Collett
EXECUTIVE OFFICER
K. Ross, Dip Bus Marketing (started
September 2009)
EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT TO
HEAD OF DEVELOPMENT
D. Veitch (left September 2010)
STORES/TRANSPORT OFFICERS
S. Perkins
M. Birch
VENUE FACILITIES
COORDINATOR
A. Ferrari
HEAD OF PUBLIC PROGRAMS
M. Judd, BSc, Grad Dip T
PUBLIC PROGRAMS
COORDINATOR – EXECUTIVE
K. Ross, Dip Bus Marketing (left
September 2009)
E. Thomson, BSc (started November
2009)
MARKETING SECTION
MANAGER, MARKETING
C. Savage, BA (Hons), Gad Dip
Journalism
PUBLIC PROGRAMS
COORDINATOR – MARKETING
A. Hua, BA (Journalism), M
Marketing
A. Bonnin, B Int Studies & Media (left
November 2009)
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
SECTION
MANAGER, COMMUNITY
ENGAGEMENT
L. Underwood, B T, B Edu
S. Morris, Dip T
PUBLIC PROGRAMS
COORDINATOR – COMMUNITY
ENGAGEMENT
K. Tucker
INDIGENOUS SERVICES
INFORMATION OFFICERS
S. Agius
M. Clancy
SUPERVISOR, DISCOVERY
CENTRE
M. Gemmell
DIRECTORATE PUBLIC PROGRAMS
64
DISCOVERY CENTRE
INFORMATION OFFICER
C. Burke (started December 2009, left
January 2010)
SCHOOL HOLIDAY PROGRAM
ASSISTANTS
S. Fraser (left February 2010)
R. Handrickan
V. Keetch
D. Averay
L. Niemz (left February 2010)
L. Barnes
S. Rampal Thomas (started August
2009)
T. Finch (started September 2009)
A. Tate
P. Day (started March 2010)
SPECIAL EXHIBITIONS
SECTION
MANAGER, TEMPORARY AND
TRAVELLING EXHIBITIONS
T. Gilchrist, BA, Grad Dip Comm
(PR)
PUBLIC PROGRAMS
COORDINATOR – EXHIBITIONS
A. Guy
EDUCATION SECTION
EDUCATION OFFICERS
S. Langsford, BSc, Grad Dip T, Grad
Dip Ed Admin
C. Nobbs, Adv Dip T
INDIGENOUS LANGUAGE AND
CULTURE SPECIALISTS
T. Minitong-Kemelfield (started June
2010)
E. Amamoo (started June 2010)
EDUCATION SUPPORT OFFICER
C. Pietrantonio (nee Ferreira)
DEVELOPMENT & DESIGN
SECTION
MANAGER, DEVELOPMENT &
DESIGN
D. Kerr, B Ed (Hons), BA
SENIOR EXHIBITION OFFICER
I.R. Maidment, BA, Dip T (Art)
MUSEUM SERVICES OFFICER
G. Parnell
SUPERVISOR 3D DESIGN
J. Bain
EXHIBITIONS ASSISTANTS
B. Blesing, BA Vis Arts (left February
2010)
R. Hartman-Kearns, BA Vis Arts
(Hons) (left February 2010)
B. Minuzzo, BA Vis Arts (left
February 2010)
R. Moore, Ad Dip Applied & Vis Arts
(left February 2010)
K. Aird, Dip T (left March 2010)
T. Whittle (left December 2009)
M. O‟Hara (left December 2009)
K. Kenny (left February 2010)
M. Lillywhite, BA Vis Arts (left
November 2009)
M. Moore (started August 2009, left
December 2009)
T. Everuss (started July 2009, left
February 2010)
MULTIMEDIA SECTION
MANAGER, MULTIMEDIA
T. Peters, BA Fine Art
65
HEAD OF SCIENCE
R. Hill, BSc (Hons), PhD, D Sc, FAI
Biol, FLS
MANAGER OF SCIENCE
P. Clarke, BSc, BA, PhD
PERSONAL ASSISTANT TO HEAD
OF SCIENCE & MANAGER OF
SCIENCES
L. Strefford
HEAD OF COLLECTIONS
R. Morris, BA (Hons), M Soc Sci
DEPUTY HEAD OF COLLECTIONS
K. Walshe, PhD
ADMIN. COORDINATORS
D. Churches (part-time)
INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
SECTION
INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
MANAGER
F. Zilio, B A, MIMS
LIBRARY SERVICES OFFICER
J. Evans
ARCHIVES COLLECTION
MANAGER
L. Gardam (Maternity leave start: 2
September 2009)
H. Hopper (Start: 19 October 2009)
FAMILY HISTORY ACCESS
OFFICER
A. Abdullah-Highfold
ARA IRITJA PROJECT
J. Dallwitz
D. Dallwitz
ANTHROPOLOGY SECTION
HEAD OF ANTHROPOLOGY
P. Clarke, BSc, BA, PhD
SENIOR RESEARCHER
AUSTRALIAN ETHNOLOGY
P. Jones, LLB, BA (Hons), PhD
ANTHROPOLOGY CASUAL POOL
R. Candy (Start: 1 July 2009; Finish 31
October 2009)
S. Graham (Start: 1 July 2009; Finish
31 October 2009)
T. Webb (Start: 13 May 2009; Finish
27 November 2009)
ABORIGINAL COLLECTIONS
SENIOR RESEARCHER FOREIGN
ETHNOLOGY
B. Craig, BA (Hons), Dip Ed, M A
(Hons), PhD
SENIOR COLLECTION MANAGER
ABORIGINAL COLLECTIONS &
ARCHAEOLOGY
K. Walshe, PhD
COLLECTION MANAGER,
ABORIGINAL ARCHAEOLOGY
G. Toone
COLLECTION MANAGER
FOREIGN ETHNOLOGY
A. Rose, BA, Grad Dip Mus St, M A
ASSISTANT COLLECTION
MANAGER ANTHROPOLOGY
T. Dodd
COLLECTION MANAGER
HISTORY OF SCIENCE & POLAR
COLLECTIONS
M. Pharaoh
SCIENCE
66
EARTH SCIENCES SECTION
HEAD OF EARTH SCIENCES
A. Pring, BSc (Hons), PhD, FMSA, F
Min Soc
SENIOR RESEARCHER
J. Brugger, BSc (Hons), PhD
M. Lee, BSc (Hons), PhD
J. Gehling, Ph D, MSc, BSc (Hons)
SENIOR COLLECTION MANAGER
B. McHenry, BSc (Hons), M Sc
COLLECTION MANAGER
J. McNamara, BSc (Hons)
(Finished: 30 September 2009)
M. Binnie (Start: 22 February 2010)
ASSISTANT COLLECTION
MANAGER
D. Rice (part-time) (left: December
2010)
RESEARCH
ASSISTANTS/SCIENTISTS
J. Bei (start: 15 July 2009; finish 31
January 2010)
C. Ciobanu (start: 11 January 2010)
A. McFadden (start: 12 October 2009)
B. Tooth (start: 3 March 2010)
F. Williams (start 14 January 2010)
BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
SECTION
HEAD OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
S. Cooper, BSc (Hons), PhD
ENTOMOLOGY
RESEARCHER TERRESTRIAL
INVERTEBRATES
Mark Stevens, PhD
SENIOR COLLECTION MANAGER
TERRESTRIAL INVERTEBRATES
J. Forrest, OAM, Assoc Dip
Photography (Retired: 26 February
2010)
COLLECTION MANAGER
TERRESTRIAL INVERTEBRATES
P. Hudson, PhD (Flinders)
ASSISTANT COLLECTION
MANAGER ENTOMOLOGY
C. Lee (Part-time)
DATABASING PROJECT
J. Wood
J. Moore
I. Van Steepen (Finished: 31 May
2009)
ARACHNOLOGY
COLLECTION MANAGER
ARACHNOLOGY
D. Hirst.
PARASITOLOGY
PRINCIPAL RESEARCHER
PARASITOLOGY
I. Whittington, BSc (Hons), PhD
COLLECTION MANAGER
PARASITOLOGY
L. Chisholm, BSc, M Sc, PhD
MARINE INVERTEBRATES
COLLECTION MANAGER MARINE
INVERTEBRATES
T. Laperousaz, BSc (Hons)
COLLECTION MANAGER MARINE
INVERTEBRATES
R. Hamilton Bruce, AIAT, ABPI, Dip
Graph Design
ASSISTANT COLLECTION
MANAGER MARINE
INVERTEBRATES
C. Lee (Part-time)
67
HERPETOLOGY
SENIOR RESEARCHER
HERPETOLOGY
M. Hutchinson, BSc (Hons), PhD
COLLECTION MANAGER
HERPETOLOGY
C. Kovach
ICHTHYOLOGY
COLLECTION MANAGER
ICHTHYOLOGY
R. Foster (part time)
MAMMALOGY
SENIOR RESEARCHER
MAMMALOGY
C. Kemper, BSc, PhD
COLLECTION MANAGER
MAMMALOGY
D. Stemmer, BSc (part time)
RESEARCH ASSISTANT
MAMMALOGY
M. McDowell, BSc (Hons), M Sc
(Finished: 1 March 2009)
TECHNICAL OFFICER
T. Reardon, Cert Sc Tech
BOLIVAR CASUAL POOL
J. Adams (Start: 27 July 2009; Finish
30 June 2010)
B. Mazey (Start: 1 July 2009; Finish
31 December 2009)
T. Segawa (Start: 22 February 2010)
ORNITHOLOGY
SENIOR COLLECTION MANAGER
ORNITHOLOGY
P. Horton, BSc (Hons), PhD
COLLECTION MANAGER
ORNITHOLOGY
M. Penck, BSc (Hons)
ASSISTANT COLLECTION
MANAGER ORNITHOLOGY
D. Churches (part time)
EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
HEAD OF EBU/PRINCIPAL
RESEARCHER EVOLUTIONARY
BIOLOGY
S. Donnellan, BSc (Hons), PhD
SENIOR RESEARCHER
EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
M. Adams, BSc (Hons)
S. Cooper, BSc (Hons), PhD
RESEARCHER EVOLUTIONARY
BIOLOGY
L. Wheaton (Start: 20 July 2009)
R. King (Start: 5 January 2009)
PRINCIPAL TECHNICAL
OFFICERS
T. Bertozzi, BSc (Hons), PhD
K. Saint
TECHNICAL OFFICERS
T. Reardon, Cert Sc Tech
R. Foster (part-time)
EBU CASUAL POOL
T. Bradford (Start: 11 December 2009)
A. Craigie (Start: 5 May 2010)
A. Fitch (Start: 27 April 2010)
J. Guzinski (Start: 1 April 2010)
T. Hague (Start: 12 February 2010;
Finish: 15 June 2010)
A. Hugall (Start: 1 July 2009; Finish:
30 September 2010)
S. Nicolson (Start: 18 December 2009)
E. Perkins (Start: 5 January 2010;
Finish: 28 February 2010)
68
HONORARY RESEARCH
ASSOCIATES
K. Akerman (Anthropology)
A. Austin, BSc, PhD (Biological
Sciences)
S. Barker, PhD (Biological Sciences)
D. Barton, PhD (Biological Sciences)
I. Beveridge, BSc, PhD (Biological
Sciences)
A. Black, PhD (Biological Sciences)
V. Boll, PhD (Anthropology)
S. Burnell, BSc (Biological Sciences)
A. Cooper, PhD (Biological Sciences)
D. Corbett, PhD (Earth Sciences)
C. Daniels, BSc, PhD (Earth Sciences)
J. Forrest, OA (Biological Sciences)
T. Gara (Information Services)
L.Gershwin, BSc, PhD (Biological
Sciences)
P. Greenslade (Biological Sciences)
M. Halt, BSc (Hons) (Biological
Sciences)
M.Hammer, BSc (Hons), PhD
(Biological Sciences)
J. Jago, BSc (Hons), PhD, F Aus IMM
(Earth Sciences)
R. Jenkins, BSc (Hons), PhD (Earth
Sciences)
G. R. Johnston (Biological Sciences)
B. Kear, PhD (Earth Sciences)
P. Kolesik, PhD (Biological Sciences)
P.Kruze, BSc, PhD (Earth Sciences)
R. J. Lavigne, PhD (Biological
Sciences)
A. J. McArthur, OAM, BE (Biological
Sciences)
C. Madden, BSc, M Env St (Biological
Sciences)
E. Matthews, BA, PhD (Biological
Sciences)
G. Medlin, BSc, Dip T (Biological
Sciences)
M. O‟Donoghue, B Ed, Grad Dip Rel
Ed, M Ed (Foreign Ethnology)
N. Pledge, BSc (Hons), M Sc (Earth
Sciences)
G. Prideaux, BSc (Hons), PhD (Earth
Sciences)
L. Reed, BA (Hons), PhD (Earth
Sciences)
D. Rice (Earth Sciences)
S. Richards (Biological Sciences)
G. Rouse, PhD (Biological Sciences)
T. Schultze-Westrum, PhD (Foreign
Ethnology)
P. Shaughnessy, BSc (Hons), M Sc,
PhD (Biological Sciences)
S. Shepherd, BA, LIB, M Env St, PhD
(Biological Sciences)
G. Smith (Information Services)
M. Snow, BSc, PhD (Earth Sciences)
I. Tomo (Biological Sciences)
M. Tyler, AO, MSc (Biological
Sciences)
L. Warner, BSc (Biological Sciences)
C. Watts, BSc (Hons), PhD (Biological
Sciences)
Prof R Wells, BSc (Hons), PhD (Earth
Sciences)
W. Zeidler, BSc (Hons), MSc, PhD
(Biological Sciences)
69
5. HUMAN RESOURCES
EMPLOYEE NUMBERS, GENDER AND STATUS
NUMBER OF EMPLOYEES BY SALARY BRACKET
STATUS OF EMPLOYEES IN CURRENT POSITION
FTEs Ongoing Short-Term
Contract
Long-Term
Contract
Other
(Casual) Total
Male 37.4 1 1 1.46 40.86
Female 20 4.4 5 3.27 32.67
TOTAL 57.4 5.4 6 4.73 73.53
PERSONS Ongoing Short-Term
Contract
Long-Term
Contract
Other
(Casual)* Total
Male 38 1 1 2 42
Female 23 5 5 7 40 TOTAL 61 6 6 9 82
Total Number of Employees
Persons 82
FTEs 74 (FTEs shown to 1 decimal place)
Gender % Persons % FTEs
Male 51.22 55.57
Female 48.78 44.43
Number of Persons During the 2009-10 Financial Year
Separated from the agency 37
Recruited to the agency 28
Number of Persons at 30 June 2010
On Leave without Pay 3
Salary Bracket Male Female Total
$0 - $49 199 6 12 18
$49 200 - $62 499 13 16 29
$62 500 - $80 099 11 9 20
$80 100 - $100 999 9 1 10
$100 100+ 3 2 5
TOTAL 42 40 82
70
EXECUTIVES
Number of executives by gender, classification and status in current position
Ongoing Tenured
Contract
Untenured
Contract
Other
(Casual) Total
Classification Male Female Male Female Male Female Male Female Male Female
SAES1 1 1
Total 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
LEAVE MANAGEMENT
Average days leave taken per full time equivalent employee
Leave Type 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10
Sick Leave 5.42 4.59 5.4 5.87
Family Carer‟s Leave 0.45 0.78 1 0.69
Special Leave with Pay 0.73 0.36 0.9 0.98
Note: Provision of the information reported in the following three tables is voluntary, therefore the
figures provided may not fully reflect the diversity of our workforce.
ABORIGINAL AND/OR TORRES STRAIT ISLANDER EMPLOYEES
* Target from South Australia’s Strategic Plan
Salary Bracket
Aboriginal
and/or Torres
Strait Islander
Employees
Total Employees
% Aboriginal
and/or Torres
Strait Islander
Employees
Target*
$0 - $49 199 0 18 0
$49 200 - $62 499 3 29 10.34
$62 500 - $80 099 0 20 0
$80 100 - $100 999 0 10 0
$100 100+ 0 5 0
TOTAL 3 82 3.65 % 2%
71
WORKFORCE DIVERSITY
Age Profile
Age Bracket Male Female Total % of Total
2010
Workforce
Benchmark*
15-19 0 0 0 0 6.1
20-24 1 2 3 3.66 10.6
25-29 3 6 9 10.98 10.5
30-34 2 4 6 7.32 9.4
35-39 2 2 4 4.88 11.2
40-44 6 7 13 15.85 11.1
45-49 5 4 9 10.98 12.2
50-54 5 6 11 13.41 11
55-59 11 7 18 21.95 9.2
60-64 6 2 8 9.79 6.0
65+ 1 0 1 1.22 2.9
TOTAL 42 40 82 100 100
*Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics, Australian Demographic Statistics, 6291.0.55.001 Labour
Force Status (ST LM8) by sex, age, state, marital status – employed – total from Feb78 Supertable,
South Australia at May 2010.
CULTURAL AND LINGUISTIC DIVERSITY
Male Female Total % Agency SA Community*
Number of employees born
overseas 9 8 17 20.73% 20.3%
Number of employees who
speak language(s) other than
English at home 1 2 3 3% 16.6%
*Benchmarks from ABS Publication Basic Community Profile (SA) Cat No. 2001.0, 2006 census.
NUMBER OF EMPLOYEES WITH ONGOING DISABILITIES REQUIRING WORKPLACE
ADAPTATION
(According to Commonwealth DDA definition)
Male Female Total % of Agency
1 0 1 1.2
72
NUMBER OF EMPLOYEES WITH DISABILITIES REQUIRING WORKPLACE
ADAPTATION
Disability Male Female Total % of Agency
Disability Requiring Workplace Adaption 1 0 1 1.2
Physical 0 0 0 0
Intellectual 0 0 0 0
Sensory 0 0 0 0
Psychological/ Psychiatric 0 0 0 0
VOLUNTARY FLEXIBLE WORKING ARRANGEMENTS
Number Of Employees Using Voluntary Flexible Working Arrangements By Gender
Male Female Total
Purchased Leave 0 0 0
Flexitime 31 25 56
Compressed Weeks 2 0 2
Part-time 0 3 3
Job Share 0 3 3
Working from Home 3 0 3
PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
Documented Review Of Individual Performance
Employees with … % Total Workforce
A review within the past 12 months 1.22
A review older than 12 months 65.85
No review 32.93
TRAINING EXPENDITURE
As a percentage of total remuneration expenditure
Training and Development Total Cost % of Total Salary
Expenditure
Total training and development
expenditure $6874.00 1.4
Total leadership and management
development expenditure $0.00 0
73
6. OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH, SAFETY AND INJURY MANAGEMENT (OHS&IM)
Key achievements
The museum is continually working towards developing a safe environment for staff and visitors
alike. A positive culture with an emphasis on safety exists throughout all areas of the museum‟s
operations. Key achievements during the reporting period 2009-10 are as follows:
Training programs for employees, volunteers, students and honoraries including refresher
induction, first aid, four wheel drive, manual handling, responsible officer, volunteer guides
and internal auditor training were conducted.
Remote area and field trip operations were reviewed. Documentation was reviewed to
reflect changes to the requirements for remote area and field trip operations.
Communications equipment including satellite phones and Personal Locator Beacons were
purchased to support these operations.
Incident reporting increased, including near miss reporting, a lead indicator of a
progressively positive reporting culture.
Four employees volunteered as Health and Safety Representatives bringing the total to five
an increase of 400%.
Working with children and young people policy was created; strategies to support the policy
included the requirement for personnel working with children and young people to obtain a
National Police Certificate.
74
OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH, SAFETY AND WELFARE AND INJURY MANAGEMENT
REPORT.
The South Australian Museum performance against the elements of the Safety In the Public Sector
2007-2010 is tabled below:
1. SUSTAINABLE COMMITMENT
Strategy Action Performance indicator Responsibility Status
1.1 Strategies
to promote zero
harm vision
OHS&W
awareness training
for all new
employees
100% of new employees
received induction.
Managers 100% have
received
training
1.1 Strategies
to promote zero
harm vision
OHS&W
Induction for
volunteer guides
and hosts
Volunteer guides and hosts
receive induction and
training
Community
Engagement
managers
Volunteer
guides and
hosts
received
training.
1.2
Implementation
of DPC
OHS&W&IM
system
DPC OHSW & IM
training
New employee‟s complete
DPC on line induction
Managers New
employees
completed
DPC on line
induction
1.3 OHS&W
awareness
Inclusion of
OHS&W in
meetings agendas
80% of meetings to
include OHS&W
Managers 90% of
meetings
include
OHS&W
2. FINANCIAL ACCOUNTABILITY
2.1 OHS&W
training needs
identified
Training needs
analysed
Training programs planned
Training needs analysis
conducted
OHS&W
Coordinator
Ongoing,
training
needs
analysis
conducted
2.2 Identify
purchases
required as
corrective
actions
Purchase of
required
equipment/tools/it
ems on a priority
basis
Required
equipment/tools/items
purchased
Business
Manager
OHS&W
Coordinator
Ongoing
3. INTEGRATED RISK MANAGEMENT
3.1 Adopt
hazard
management
principals to
control risk
Maintain records
and identify
controls to be
implemented to
minimise risk
Controls are implemented
to minimise risk.
Executive
OHS&W
Committee
OHS&W
Coordinator
Risks are
managed.
SAM risk
register
established
for longer
term risks.
75
4. RIGOROUS EVALUATION
4.1 Work place
inspections
Work place
inspections are
programmed by
DPC Workplace
Safety and Well
Being unit.
100% of programmed
work place inspections
occur
OHS&W
Coordinator
Ongoing,
100% of
scheduled
inspections
have been
conducted
4.2 Review
internal
policies and
procedures
Maintain
document register.
Internal policies and
procedures reviewed
Executive
OHS&W
Committee
OHS&W
Coordinator
Policies and
procedures
have been
reviewed
4.3 Create
internal
policies and
procedures.
Identify internal
policies and
procedures
required by SAM
Internal policies and
procedures required by
SAM have been created
Executive
OHS&W
Committee
OHS&W
Coordinator
Internal
policies,
procedures
and forms
have been
created in
consultation
with
stakeholders
4.4 Internal
audits
conducted
Internal audits
program is
established by
DPC Workplace
Safety and Well
Being Unit
100% of programmed
audits are conducted
OHS&W
Coordinator
Ongoing,
100% of
scheduled
audits have
been
conducted
Table 1 OHS Notices and Corrective Actions taken
Number of notifiable occurrences pursuant to OHS&W Regulations
Division 6.6
0
Number of notifiable injuries pursuant to OHS&W Regulations Division
6.6
0
Number of notices served pursuant to OHS&W Act s35, s39 and s40
(default, improvement and prohibition notices)
0
Table 2 Reported Incidents
Mechanism of incident 0
Falls, slips and trips 9
Hits 4
Hit by stationary object 2
Hit by moving object 1
Chemicals 2
Burn 1
Hit by falling object 1
Cuts 5
Vehicle 1
Table 3: Agency gross workers compensation expenditure for 2009-10 compared with 2008-09
76
EXPENDITURE
2009-10
($)
2008-09
($)
Variation
($ +)
%Change
($-)
Income maintenance
0 0 0 0
Lump Sum Settlements Redemptions – Sect.42
0 0 0 0
Lump Sum Settlements Permanent
Disability – Sect.43
0 0 0 0
Medical/Hospital Costs combined
738.45 0 738.45 738%
Other
0 0 0 0
Total Claims Expenditure
$738.45 0 $738.45 738%
Successful consultative arrangements within the South Australian Museum include:
INTERNAL
STAKEHOLDERS
CORPORATE
STAKEHOLDERS
EXTERNAL
STAKEHOLDERS
Employees ArtsSA Adelaide University
Health and Safety Committee DPC; DPCCC Spotless Maintenance Contractors
Health and Safety
Representative
DPC; Workplace Safety and
Well Being Unit
ISS Cleaning Contractors
Volunteers and Students Zero Waste Wilson Security
Executive Management SafeWork SA SA Metropolitan Fire Service
Registered Training
Organisations
Disability Action Plan
The Museum continues to work with Arts SA on monitoring its visitor services for disability access.
The Museum receives regular visitors to its galleries from people with a range of disabilities and
special needs. Museum staff also respond to specific requests for specially designed group tours
and experiences.
All exhibition and gallery development takes into account consideration of access and egress and
disabled parking is available at the rear of the Museum for cars and vans.
Equal Employment Opportunity Programs
As an EEO employer, the South Australian Museum is committed to employing on merit regardless
of race, gender, sexuality, marital status, age, pregnancy or disability for all positions within the
organisation. This is supported by the Museum‟s diverse workforce profile.
77
Overseas Travel 2009-10
Number of
Employees
Destination/s Reason for Travel Total Cost
to Agency
1 BELGIUM Director represented the Australian Federal Government as a delegate at the
Global Science Forum.
$0.00
1 UK Fullfiling ARC Linkage Grant obligation LX0882558. Visiting Butlin‟s laboratory,
University of Sheffield, UK.
$3 346.00
(Salary)
1 MACQUARIE
ISLAND
Invertebrate biodiversity survey of sub-
Antarctic, Macquarie Island $10 804.00
(Salary)
1 ANTARTICA
Undertake role as PI on the 3rd year fieldwork for an international polar year
project IPY “Understanding, valuing and
protecting Antarctica‟s unique terrestrial
ecosystems: predicting biocomplexity in
dry valley ecosystems.
$0.00
1 NAMBIA
Invited to join a group of educators and science communication practitioners to
accompany the South Africa and
American research scientists for a 10 day
field expedition to the Gobabeb Desert
Research Station in Namibia.
$0.00
1 SOUTH
AFRICA
To attend the 6th International symposium on Monogenea in cape town
South Africa
$2 400.00
(Salary)
1 PARIS/
PRAGUE
Keynote speaker at SEPM conference, studying Cambrian fossil collections in
the museum National D‟Historie
naturelle, Paris, attending official
conference of chairs of subcommission
working on defining boundaries in the
geological time scale, Prague
$5 250.00
(Salary)
1 UK Research and documentation trip as part of the data gathering phase for the ARC
Project: “Reconstructing the Spencer and
Gillen collection”
$0.00
$21 800.00
78
ASBESTOS REPORT
Priority and Removal Activities
Category
Number of Sites Category
Description
Interpretation One or more items at
these sites … At start
of year At end of
year
1 Remove should be removed promptly.
2 14 14 Remove as soon as
practicable should be scheduled for
removal at a practicable time.
3 15 9 Use care during
maintenance may need removal during
maintenance works.
4 23 8 Monitor condition has asbestos present. Inspect according to legislation and
policy.
5
No asbestos
identified / identified asbestos has been
removed
(All asbestos identified as per
OHS&W 4.2.10(1) has been
removed)
6 Further information
required (These sites not yet
categorised)
Definitions
Category: The site performance score, determined by the lowest item performance score at each
site.
Number of Sites in Category: A count of how many sites have the corresponding site performance
score, with separate counts done at the start and the end of each year.
Category Description: Indicates the recommended action corresponding to the lowest item
performance score (recorded in the asbestos register by a competent person, as per OHS & W
Regulations (SA) 1995, 4.2.10).
Interpretation: The Asbestos register was updated on 9/6/2009 following inspections conducted by
DTEI Asbestos Services.
Level 2 of the museum had all asbestos removed by licensed contractors as a part of the
Biodiversity Gallery building project.
Netley building 4 had asbestos material removed from the roof and claddings.
The large number of sites relates to the amount of integral asbestos material that is part of the
infrastructure of buildings and fittings and is considered low risk when left undisturbed.
79
Account Payment Statistics
Particulars
Number of
accounts
paid
Percentage of
accounts paid
(by number)
Value in $A of
accounts paid
Percentage
of accounts
paid (by
value)
Paid by due date* 2 800 84.9% $6 760 715.82 93.0%
Paid late, within 30
days of due date 421 12.8% $536 449.22 5.7%
Paid more than 30
days from due date 77 2.3% $119 008.33 1.3%
Fraud And Legislative Compliance
No frauds or suspected frauds have occurred to the knowledge of the management of the
South Australian Museum. The Museum has maintained a comprehensive system of
checks and balances to control and prevent fraud, under the advice of the Auditor
General‟s Department. Full disclosure has been made to the auditors regarding all non
compliance obligations with laws and regulations that should be considered in preparing
the Museums financial report.
CONSULTANTS – 2009-10
Value No Name Description Total Expenditure
Below $10,000 1 Grieve Gillett Pty Ltd
Design concepts for a
proposed Information Centre at SA Museum
$5 535.00
$10,000 - $50,000 1 Ian Baird Digitising and data entry
for the Ara Irititja archive $15 285.00
2 Graham Nudding
Data entry, scanning and
filing for Ara Iritja digital archive
$13 910.00
Above $50,000 0 $0.00
Total $34 730.00
80
7. FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT, 1991 PART 11 SECTION 9(2)
INFORMATION STATEMENT
Agency Structure and Functions: Section 9(2)(A)
The following information is contained in this Annual Report and is deemed to be consistent with
the requirements of the Freedom of Information Act 1991:
Statement of role and objectives
Legislation responsibilities
Resources employed
Agency performance is monitored regularly. Each year specific targets and objectives are
formulated and major achievements, improvements and initiatives reported.
Effect of Agency’s Functions on Members of the Public: Section 9(2)(B)
The Museum has a direct effect on the general public in two quite different ways. First as an
institution whose display galleries are open for public education and enjoyment and second through
the scientific divisions whose research and information are available to other Government
departments as well as the public.
The impact and involvement of each division of the museum in this process can be obtained from
the achievements and initiatives section of this Annual Report.
Arrangements for Public Participation in Policy Formation: Section 9(2)(C)
The Board of eight members is appointed by the Minister for the Arts. These appointments are from
the general public and provide an avenue for public participation in policy formulation.
For any major development, such as the development of displays relating to living cultures,
advisory committees are established for the period of the project to ensure that there is full and
proper provision for public participation.
In addition, the museum maintains regular contact with Aboriginal community groups through the
Board appointed Aboriginal Advisory Group which deals specifically with on matters relating to
custodianship and access to collections.
Description of Kinds of Documents held by the Agency: Section 9(2)(D)
The Museum classifies all documents into the following categories:
Board Minutes
The minutes of the SA Museum Board meetings are numbered and inserted in a board minute book.
Board papers are also numbered and filed in hard cover folders. The papers contain all documents
and correspondence relating to the board meeting. Current minute books and papers are kept in the
Director‟s Office. Older minute books and papers, dating back to 1940, are stored in the Museum
Archives section. Board papers and Minutes up to 1940 are permanently stored in State Records.
Dockets
The museum continues to administer the formal document recording/registration and archiving via
its docket database system. Each relevant department‟s administration sections coordinate the
process of document management. Dockets hold all documents concerned with the day to day
management of the museum and are classified as follows – collection management; development
and design; education; governance – museum board; indigenous services; information management;
public programs; research; sponsorship; and volunteers.
81
Policy Statements
The Board has published several Policy Statements, which are available for use by the general
public. These include: „Professional and Commercial Services‟, „Statement on Secret/Sacred
Collection‟, „Collections Policy (2005-2009)‟, „Policy on Human Skeletal Remains Collection‟,
„Exhibition Policy‟, „Publications Policy‟, „Honorary Appointments‟, „Guidelines for the
Acquisition, Operation and Management of Computers in the Museum‟, „Access to Personal
Information – policy and procedures‟, „Procedures for Records Management‟ and „Copyright Policy
and Procedures‟, „Museum Budget Policy‟ and „South Australian Museum Board Investment
Policy‟.
Access Arrangements, Procedures and Points of Contact: Section 9(2)(E)(F)
To gain access to museum documents, other than those identified above as available, it is necessary
to apply in writing under the Freedom of Information Act to:
Contact Officer, Freedom of Information
C/- The Director
South Australian Museum
North Terrace, Adelaide 5000
Freedom of Information
One enquiry under the Freedom of Information Act was received in 2009-10.
Whistleblowers Protection Act 1993
As an entity of the South Australian Government, the South Australian Museum is committed to
support and encourages staff to demonstrate integrity and conduct ethical professionalism as part of
the public sector. Reporting as defined by part of the Whistleblowers Protection Act is encouraged
should it be necessary. For the 2009-10 reporting period there were no occasions where public
interest information has been disclosed to the responsible officer.